The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 81, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 13, 1922 Page: 1 of 8
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1, 1922 " *
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Number 81
Volume 4
DAUGHERTY IS CHARGED
New York Yanks
SAYS L PASHA
HOPEFUL OF PEACE
v
n-
I
bn
d
je
r
Lockhart, where he closed a
administration shipping bill.
St James, the less.
tiful.
n
The boll weevil got
ton this year.
heavy
in its work with extremely
K
1
Cotton Market
ir
WEATHER
N
1
against 24,791 UM year
Eh- *-
het
.2k 1
- 4.
Spoke Only About Ten Minutes
Expressing Feebleness, But
Makes Expression of Grati-
tude for Kindnesses He Has
Received While in U. S.
Turkish Leader, the Only Hope
for Speedy and Satisfactory
Settlement, and Says Turks
Have Always Treated For-
eigners Right
or
ut
em
Rev. B. B. Crimm, famous as a revi-
valist and a noted fox hunter, arrived
at his farm home, five miles east of
WANAMAKER TO
BE BURIED IN A
HEARING ON IMPEACHMENT PROCEEDINGS AGAINST AT-
TORNEY ARE BEGUN; PROSECUTING MEMBER SCORES
VICTORY BY GETTING TAFTS ACTION ADMITTED
CONSTITUTION
CHANGE BEATEN
STATE ILLINOIS
a
it
Th* Paper that Move
People are Willing to
Pay Their Money for
Than Any Other Pub-
lished in East Texna.
he sails back home tomorrow.
The Tiger of France received ova-
Turkish Leader Insists Upon An
Exchange of Greeks For
Turks For Peace
tion after ovation.
Clemenceau spoke only about
The Paper that Hee
Mara than Three Thou-
sand Circylation in the
County of Publication—
1600 in the City.
Decision Made by Wallace After
Long Study Over Matter of
Armour & Morris
A
a -•
EVANGELISTS
GIVEN FOX HUNT
BY REV. CRIMM
COTTON CROP
SMALL BUT OF
GREAT VALUE
Spectacular Holdup Staged In
Daylight and $96,000
Secured
By the Associated Press
New York, Dec. 12. — Col. Jacob
FRENCH TIGER
TAKES LEAVE
OF THE U. S. A.
the Hotel Pennsylvania for
Last Appearance
WITH MAKING INJURIOUS
APPOINTMENTS OFFICE
cers announced today. Scott is charg-
ed with conspiracy against the Unit-
ed States government and Thielbar
with possession and sale.
The Best of Christmas Presents
The Morning News Has Nearly One Hundred
of the James Pott & Company
—They Will Not Last Long, So You
Had Best Get Yours Today!
TWO NEGROES LYNCHED
FOR THE CRIME OF ONE
Will Inspect The
Legion Hospital
SMALLEST TOWN IN
WORLD WITH ROTARY
NEFF BREAKS
RECORD; GOES
ON BIG HUNT
SOME SA YINS’
OF SI BONES
Misses Cunningham
Are Entertained
ILLUSTRATED RED
LETTER BIBLES
that we propose to sell at less than one-half
retail price during the next
5,
2;88
minutes, exphaining that he was
' ed and had a sore throat nd wanted
By the Associated Press -
Washington, Dec. 12.—Hearing on impeachment proceedings
brought against Attorney General Daugherty by Representative
Keller, Republican, Minnesota, was opened today before the House
judiciary committee, marked by frequent clashes between mem-
bers of the committee and Jackson H Ralston, counsel for Mr.
Keller, first as to the method of procedure and second as to the
revelancy of testimony.
APPROPRIATION
BILL IS PASSED IN
HOUSE BIG VOTE
damage and drouth materially assis-
ted in keeping down the production.
South Carolina and Georgia were
the hardest hit of any of the cotton
growing states, their production being
about 40 per cent of the average of
the 5 years 1916 to 1920. The farm
price of cotton on December 8 aver-
aged 23.8 cents per povnd which
ranks fourth highest in the history
of the country being exceeded only by
the price in 1917, 1918 and 1919.
Statisticians estimate the demin-
sions of this year s crop in bales to
be equal to a tube 600 feet square and
600 long.
Austin, Dec. 12. — S. B. Cowell, the
chairman of the State Board of Con-
trol. left tonight for Kerrville where
tomorrow he will meet with J. B Me-
Combs and W R Talbott, represen-
tatives of the United States Veterans
Bureau to inspect the American Le-
gion hospital there. The inspection
probmbly will detarmine whether or
not the federal bureau will lease the
hospital from the state
> -
J J L--
: ’ • 2
** 2
TWO ARRESTED IN
CONNECTION WITH
HIGHJACKER RAID
a.E'
By the Associnted Press
New York, Dec. 12. — Surrounded
by friends of France, in a hall fes-
tooned with intertwined flags of
to go to bed.
“I cannot find words," he ebgan “to
, express my gratitude for so kind a
welcome.”
“I had made up my mind about a
week ago to make here tonight a long
and elaborate speech to prove a great
" many things that need not be proved
and to tell you many things which you
know as well as I do. But Miss Anne
Morgan (chairman of the committee)
was good enough to let me know that
I had better not speak and I agreed
Harlington, Tex., Dec. 12. — Gov-
ernor J. B. A. Robertson, of Oklahoma
accompanied with Judge George B.
Rittenhouse and Judge William
By the \ssoolated Fress
Washington. Dec. 12. — Declaring
that a bonus to soldiers was as jus-
. Texas U. To Keep Whittaker
Ry the Associated Press
Austin, Dec. 12. — Barry M. Whit-
taker, whose resignation as head of
football coach of the University to
Texas was accepted by the athletic
council Monday will be retained by the
university interrural athletics it was
announced by members of the council.
Selection of a successor as head coach
will be taken up at a later meeting,
it was stated. _______
te2an2a
from 10 until noon. The interment
N. and finished up his work for the year.
His evangelistic party composed of Thursday afternoon.
Miss Ethel Denny entertained last
night honoring Misses Christine and
Bonny Cunningham and Mr. Jasper
Colli ns.
The girls of the telephone company
gave remembrances to Misses Chris-
tine and Bonny Cunningham, the
former being in the form of a Rebec-
ca pin and the later a beautiful wish-
bone pin.
The Misses Cunningham leave this
morning for Paris, where they have
been transferred from the local tel-
ephone office.
Mr. Collins will also leave in the
morning for El Dorado, where he goes
to accept a position.
Donna, Texas, Dec. 12. — This com-
munity of fifteen hundred odd in-
habitants in Hildago county, near the
mouth of the Rio Grande, is the
smallest town in the world having a
Rotary Club all Its own, according to
information from Roger H. Motten,
executive service secretary Rotary In-
ternational.
John V. Singleton, governor of the
Thirteenth district of Rotary clubs, at
Waxahachie, Texas .reports that a lov-
ing cup has been presented the Donna
Rotary Club by the Houston Rotary
club because the former club, with its
twenty-two members all present, had
the best attendance at an inter-city
meeting. The cup was given on a
mileage basis, showing the Donna club
to have traveled 7,876 miles.
By the Assoclated Press
Perry, Fla., Dec. 12. — Arthur
Young, negro, who had been held in
jail here in connection with murder
last Saturday of Miss Ruby Hendry,
several days ago, was lynched . last
night. Another negro, Charlie Wright,
was burned at the stake Friday night
for the same crime.
Bonner and George Short, attorney
general of Oklahoma, arrived here
today and went at once to the Stuart
brothers reach near here. Governor
Pat. M. Neff of Texas, will join the
party Thursday on a hunting trip in
the northern part of the Rio Grande
Valley, where game is reported plen-
By the Assoc’ated Press
Peoria, Ill., Dec. 12. — Two men.
Arthur Scott and John Thielabr, of
Peoria, Illinois, are under arrest by
federal authorities in connection with
the recent hijackers raid on the Lib-
erty Yeast Co., warehouse, former-
ly the Old Globe Distillery, Pekin, Ill.,
from which 35 barrels of whiskey
were stolen.
Scott, who was an engineer of the
looted plant, in an alleged confession
admitted having framed with Peoria
and I’ekin hijackers, federal offi-
By the Associated Press
Chicago, Dec. 12. — Illinois vot-
ers today overwhelmingly defeated
the new proposed constitution pre-
pared by a convention which they
elected in November 1918.
With returns from slightly less
than half of the state in an hour and
a half after the poles closed the
vote was running 8 to 1 against the
change with indications that the
final majority against it would be
95.000. Williams County, scene of
the Herrin mine massacre, was de-
cisively opposed to the change, the
returns indicated.
Ghe tlarshallgtlorningilews
__MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS—SIX THOUSAND WORD NEWS REPORT RECEIVED DAILY_______________
Marshall, Texas, Wednesday, December 13, 1922
KANSAS CITY
BANK ROBBED
I
New Bank For Breckenridge
Breckenridge, Dec. 12. — A New
bank, probably called “The Stephens
County State Bank," will be opened
for businesa January 10, according to
announcement The bank is to have
a capital etock of $100,000 with $10,
000 surplus, according to Judge Wil-
liam E. Hawkins, president of the new
organization.
Company would- proceed with their
negotiations fir the Morris establish-
ment which is a competitor and one
of the "Big Five" packing establish-
ments.
Secretary Wallace declared there
appeared to be no occasion for action
at this time under the packers and
stock yard acts which he made in
connection with the proposal informal-
ly laid before him by J. Ogden Ar-
mour. Mr. Wallace also transmit,
ted this information and additional
data on the proposal to the senate
in response to a resolution of Sen-
ator Lafollette, Republican of Wis.
In a formal announcement Mr.
Wallace declared there was nothing
in the packers and stock yard act
which specifically prohibits the pur-
chase by one packer of the physical
assets of another.
Colonel Rupert To
Be Sole Owner Of
North Carolina, reintroduced the
in Camaguey. Most of the victims
are Spaniards.
America and his own land Georges ______
Clemenceau tonight came to the end |
of his peace mission and took leave of By the Arnoelated Preas
the United States. Washington Dec. 12. - The gov-
He appeared in the grand ball emment will take no action at this
room of Hotel Pennsylvania before time on the proposed acquisition of
K 1300 members of the American com- Morris and Company’s physical assets
- mission for devastated France. Im- by Armour and Company of Cnicgo,
mediately after he had spoken he mote it was formally annouced today by the
• ored to the steamer Paris on which Secretary of Agriculture.
This decision was reached by Secre-
tary Wallace after long study of the
proposal in conferences with Presi-
By the Associated Press
Washington, Dec. 12. — This years
cotton production is the smallest in
20 years excepting last seasons small
crop, but, based on the December
first farm prices it is the fourth most
valuable ever grown with an aggre-
gate of $1,134,608,356, not including
the value of linter cotton and cotton
seed which will total many millions
of dollars more.
The crop this year was placed to-
day by the Department of Agricul-
ture in its final estimate of the sea-
son at 4,767,262,000 pounds of lint
which is equivalent to 9,964,000 bales
of 500 pounds gross weights (478.4
pounds of lint and 21.6 pounds of bag-
ging and ties estimate per bale.) This
final estimate is smaller by 171,000
bales than any of the governments
forecasts of the season made from
condition reports.
There was a large acreage in cot-
» with her opinion.
"Why should I speak? I have a
■ore throat; I am tired; I am old and
I want very much to go to bed.
“But all this will not prevent m<
from saying once more what I ought
to say. I came to this country to ac-
complish a duty which nobody asked
~ me to accomplish and some people
did not even seem to like the idea
that I was going to do my duty. I
came to appeal to the American mind
and the answer came from American
. hearts . I could not do otherwise but
give my heart to those who gave their
'■ hearts to my country.”
ManArsukoraBig LEAGUE SHOULD .
Explosion In Cuba NOT INTERFERE
3y the Associated Press
Washington, Dec. 12. — The $33,-
000,000 appropriation bill of the de-
partment of justice carrying half a
million for investigation of war fraud
cases was passed late today by the
house with a record vte and with less
than 50 members in attendance.
How soon the move might be made
was a question tonight although rural
credit legislation was much to the
fore about the senate. The banking
and currency- commission to which
most of the half a dozen or more rur-
al credit bills have been referred be-
gan consideration of the measure with
the hearing of some of the propon-
ents. Further hearings will be held
tomorrow and it was indicated that it
will probably be ten days or two
weeks before the measure can be re-
ported.
*
tir-1 daugherty. There was no indication
in Washington whether Armour &
TEN DAYS ONLY
__This Bible as unbreakable backs and has more than one
hundred pages of explanatory notes, Bible questions and
answers. It is profusely illustrated. .
__Cut out this coupon and send $1.98 to the Morning News
and this greatest of Christmas gifts is yours.
__Do you believe you could make a gift that would mean as
much as would this Bible.....?
V IS WILDLY CHEERED
New York Yankees had been virtual-
ly completed and that within a week
he would be the sole owner of the
American League champions. The
club, including the Yankee stadium
'has an estimated value of $3,000,000.
GOVERNMENT TO
TAKE NO ACTION
PACKING MERGER
Taft by Mr. Wickersham constituted
the principal evidence submitted to-
day. Both deal with a pardon for
Willard N. Jones, convicted in Ore-
gon in 1907 of alleged land frauds
and referred to alleged activities of
William J. Burns, appointed last year
by Mr. Daugherty as chief of the bu-
reau of investigation of the Depart-
ment of Justice in connection with the
drawing of the jury in the Jones case
Ilie purpose of their introduction
into the record, Mr. Ralston explain-
ed, was to support the charge in the
impeachment specifications theat Mr.
Daugherty had appointed to positions
of great importance and large finan-
cial and moral responsibility men who
are “untrustworthy, corrupt and dan
gerous to the liberties of the people
of the United States.”
Receipts yesterday 1° bales.
Cotton sold at 24 cents.
Futures closed 22 points up.
Jan. New York closed---------25.11
March New York closed-------25.23
Jan. New Orleans closed-------24.81
March New Orleans closed------24.87
Jan. Liverpool closed-----------2750
March Liverpool closed-.......27-12
Galveston middling spots.—...25.20
Houston middling spots--------25.15
New York middling spots......25 30
? New Orleans middling spots — -25.00
. Liverpool middling spots------29.02
Government crop report----- 9,964,000
as against 7,953,641 last year.
K Port sales yesterday 2600 bales.
■ Port receipts yesterday 32,666 a”
’The Minnesota Republicans won
the first skirmish, the committee vot-
ing in executive session after an hour
and a half of wrangling in the open to
hear first evidence on three of the
fourteen specifications designated by
Mr. Keller instead of taking the
charges up in numerical order in
which they were presented.
Another decision was against the
summoning of Chief Justice Taft,
whose presence has been requested by
Mr. Ralston for the purpose of con-
firming a letter which Mr. Taft wrote
in 1912 while president to the then
attorney general Wickersham, which
was read into the record during the
day. The comniittee held that con-
firmation would be necessary.
This letter and one written to Mr.
Eart Texcaa: Partly cloudy,
warmer in north portion; Thura
day, increasing: cloudinese ,
warmer. 2 .E.
West Texas: Wednesday and k
Thursday partly eloudy to L
cloudy.
10 dent Harding and Attorney General
. . ! tifi .i le “as a bonus to the ship oper-
The body of the merchant prince ators." senator Simons, Democrat, of
will lie in state Thursday morning -
By the Associated Press
Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 12. — In a
spectacular hold-up in Livestock ex-
change building here late today three
unmasked bandits obtained $96,000
and shot F. A. Henry, credit manager
of the Drovers National Bank. Henry,
wounded severely in one thigh, is ex-
pected to recover. Henry was in
charge of a detail of five men sent by
the bank to get the money at a post-
office substation in the exchange
building. They received the money in
five packages. Joined by Jack Kelly,
house detective, they started back to
the bank. As they emerged into the
bank lobby three bandits commanded
them to hold up their hands. All com-
plied except Henry who carried the
largest package of money. Henry
clutched the package of money and
tried to evade the hold up men by
entering an office opening. One of
the bandits pursued and fired. Henry
fell to the floor. The bandit grasped
the package and backed out of the cor-
ridor where his companions had taken
money packages from the other mes-
sengers. One package containing $4,-
000 was overlooked.
The bandits retreated to the street
where one accomplice was waiting in
a motor car and another was standing
guard.
The fire men drove away at high
speed. Pursuit was not attempted.
The bandit car later was found sev-
eral blocks away. The car had been
stolen two weeks ago, according to
police records.
In January, 1921, bandits held up
and robbed messengers of the Drovers
National Bank of $853,000 in non ne-
gotiable checks.
h - meeting merchant and former postmaster gen- l
era!, who died today will be buried |
Steve Huskins sez thet a man
iz a hero who can smile while
hiz dawter is practicing a song.
I kan settle this waig ques-
tion enny time the warld will
lissen to me. Let me hev big
waiges en let the tuther taik all
the loss and its settled.
When I wuz yunger, fellers
most ginnurly got killed with
their boots on, but now it seems
a passel uv 'eh gets it in the
neck while warein their pajam-
mas.
Modesty, dawter, newer buys
no return ticket. When it
leeves you its gone fur good.
A man kan maik the rong
step by standin stock still.
There is grater kompensashun
in doin a onest day’s wurk then
ewer cums in the pay envelop.
Its hard to bleeve thet Bud, but
its the gospul.
Davis Christensen, pianist and sec-
retary, of Chicago; S. Wilburn, direc-
tor, Del Rio; E. E. Zirkle, song leader,
Kansas City; and Sam Taylor, advance
man, Ft. Worth, arrived yesterday to
be entertained during the last part
of this year in one of the biggest fox
hunting celebrations that the south
alone can give.
Rev. Mr. Crimm has one of the
largest, if not the largest, packs of
hounds in Texas, and is Master of
Hounds in the Texas Fox and Wolf
Hunters Association, which will meet
here December 26.
The evangelistic party was out last
night and the voices of almost forty-
dogs were ringing in the woods, but
it was not known how successful
their hunt was.
-----— 7 .. soldiers bonus bill vetoed by Presi-
will be private in the family vault inident Harding as an amendment to the
the picturesquely situated cemetery of ......
3 the Associated Press
Havana. Dec. 12. — One hundred
workmen were killed or injured to-
Jay in a b ” - explosion which wreck-
ed the Estrella sugar mill near Cam-,
aguey.
Thirty bodies had been recovered ।
up to 7 o'clock this afternoon and 40 (
injured persons were being cared for
PRIVATE TOMB BONURIpE
___ AGAIN bEFUKE
THE CONGRESS
By the Associated Press
Lausanne, Dec. 12. — Ismet Pasha
head of the Turkish delegation—the
hope of the Near Eastern conference
for a speedy and satisfactory settle-
ment for the protection of minorities
in Turkey when he insisted upon an
exchange of the Greek population in
Antonro for the Turks in Necedonia
he demanded exclusion of all foreign
interference in Turkey which he stat-
ed would protect the remaining min-
orities as the Turks always had been
able to get along with other national-
alities when they kept out of politics
and were not sitted up by outside in-
fluences.
Ismet declared that Turkey would
not accept Lord Cirsons proposal to
have the League of Nation adminis-
ter affairs of the minority so that
would mean the foreign powers would
continue their interference in Turkish
affairs and encourage minorities to
appeal to the League of Nations.
“The Armenians brought the mas-
sacres on themselves,” Ismet Pasha
declared. “They have abused Turkish
generosity and dabbled in politics. He
that proves that the Greeks and the
Armenians have been responsible for
their difficulties in Turkey. They
were fired by the example of other
Greeks. The Bulgarians and Serbs
to imitate them in hopes of upsetting
the Turkish government.
According to Ismet there are no
minorities in Turkey which can claim
the right to belong to any other na-
tion thus disposing of the Armenian
claim for a national home in Turkey.
♦ A
r
>, 'f' '
. *- v!
2--2.-
_____ Rupert officially ennounced today that
, j , n • t negotiations for the transfer t Mm
Appears In Grand Ball Room 01 of T L Huston’s half interest in the
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 81, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 13, 1922, newspaper, December 13, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1411426/m1/1/?q=coaster: accessed June 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .