The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 147, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 25, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
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Saturday, February 25, 1922
THE MARSHALL MORNING NEWS
T
NOTICBE.
[ At the Theatres
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DID YOU KNOW
$
AT THE PALACE.
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■
JOSEPH DRAKE.
4
7
1
Professional Cards
9
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Phone 53
anies Represented.
teh4rans
by
Baker & Oney.
(Adv.)
CLOSING OUT SALE.
the poison.
Eggs,
I/ i
/
7
s
AT THE GRAND.
509
V
SEVEN HOURS AT MOVIES
BE SURE YOU SEE THIS
HARRY
CAREY
' ag
T
e
ill
Auto Owners
loving sister.
ANNA."
4s
t
MAN ON LEDGE IS LASSOED
LIKES THE CROWN PRINCE
Friday-Saturday
THE CITIZENS STATE BANK
“A WOMAN’S MAN’
2-25
Resd The News Want Ada.
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MARSHALL
NEILAN
Opportunity Means Nothing
to the Man With Empty
Pockets......
Romaine Fielding
in 5-reel feature
LAST
DAY
“The Bad Samaritan,” Walter Trum-
ball’s “The Man Who Heard Every-
After Taking Poison Widow Writea
Note Declaring Apparition Up-
Veal
Matt
7
8
woman:
“Dear Sister: I am sorry for what I
have done. The best job I could get
WE
IT
ii
h
she told residents of the house she I
was sorry for the act, and pleaded
that a physician be called.
Next Thursday night, March 2nd,
1922, Pythias Lodge No. 26, of Long-
view, Texas, and the Doky Club here
have been invited to visit Eureka No.
2, and have signified their intention
of accepting the invitation, therefore
it is the order of the lodge that every
member, old and young, be urged to
attend this meeting and get acquaint-
ed with our Longview brethren and
get the message they will bring us
for the upbuilding of the order.
There will also be initiations in
the Rank of Page and possibly the
report of a committee appointed at
the last meeting looking toward the
establishment of a club room for the
use of the members.
AU members are urged to be pres-
ent
V. B. LEWIS, C. C.
J. B. HENDERSON, K. of R. & S.
in the first Western super-pro-
duction ever screened—
32
Read What Mrs. Lucas Writes Con-
cerning Her Troubles, Which
May be Just Like Yours
The
Lincoln
“SON OF TARZAN”
(Episode No. 6)
l
7
SEES WRAITH OF
HUBBY,ENOSLFE
Drug Victim Crawls Sixty Feet on
Five Inch Projection of Denver
Hotel.
J
S,"
&
Is
A V
HUTT NATIONAL'
ATTRACTION
ee
-3
I
I
WORKING GIRLS
LOOK HERE
9-
€5
a z u
It certainly is a grand medicine.”
Tanlac is sold in Marshall by Fry-
Hodge Drug Co.; in Hallsville by The
Hallsville Drug Co., and in Harleton
JESSE I CARTER
Cashier
Saturday and next week of my en-
tire nursery stock at Central Fire
Station. Holly and peach, plum, ap-
ples, pear, grapes, berries, etc.
Prices made to sell stock. Come see
me or F. S. Lemmon. Sam L. Dale,
proprietor Daingerfield Nursery.
2 -26c
HAPPY C*t>fY ~ ’Zte Zar"
A «n*EA-*- «4
At the Grind Last Time Today
COW EATING BEAR
CAUSES BIG FUROR
J. r. WOMACK,
President
New Jersey Farmer Interferes
and Has Time of His
Life.
Georgis Bride Obeyed Her Husband’s
Order to Wait Until Ho Re
turned.
braided Her for Kind of Life
She Led.
KiIIs Dog and Self.
St. Louis— Miss Nellie Wright, a
spinster, killed her pet do* in order
that she might “take it to heaven
with her' and then committed suicide
Attention, Knights
Of Pythias!
Woman Gives Rebukes of Ghost
as Reason for Her
Deed.
R. P. Littlejohn
General Insurance
Oldest Agency — Only Reliable Com:
Start a BANK ACCOUNT Today.
It is not a dificult matter te mqueeze oat a little de-
posit now and again—and it's marvelous how quick-
ly it mounts up—with the interest.
French Officer, Taken Prisoner, la Fa-
vorably Impreseed With Kaie-
oris Oldest Son.
38
comedy, drama, melodrama and farce.
And because members of the cast
were engaged for one episode only,
J ,
New York—According to Informa-
tion brought by courier from Mon-
tague, an outpost in the wilds of Sus-
sex county, N. J,, that section la be-
{
Wh
mer
e
303
If t
iota
phor
We
That you can get the best service
out of your car by having your re-
pair work done at
POST BROS. GARAGE
South Washington Avenue.
— Phone 1121. 3-20p
fastened its teeth in a calf. Mr. Cum
Did YOU ever consider that?
The individual who goes through life
without a little cash salted away—and con-
sequently without credit or the means of
getting it—can tell you of many splendid
opportunities passed along to some one more
fortunate because he had not the where-
withal to “plank down.” Why not place
yourself in a position to take advantage of
opportunity?
a well fed farmer. The other day, so
‘tis said. an unusually woolly bear
chased Bill" Cummings, a well-known
settler, up a tree, after he got tired of
having "BUl” chase him.
An armed force of neighbors shooed
the bear away and helped “Bill” out of
the tree, where he told of a wild chase
6PALASE
Last Day
prosents his j
photodmamahe ’
innovakiowe
We still have a few of those good
Stevens tires left, 30x3 1-2, $9.00;
30x3, VIM. These tires ar* strictly
guaranteed, fresh from the factory
and well worth the money. LET US
SHOW YOU. EAST TEXAS VUL
CANIZING COMPANY, west side of
So Few Can.
Sign on suburban estate: “Dogs and
hens are requested to keep off this
lawn." But suppose they can’t readr
—Boston Transcript
1
—Also—
A CHRISTIE COMEDY
“Kiss And Make Up”
A Dandy Good Program!
The consensus of opinion is that
Marshall Neilan has attained a real
achievement in the production of his
latest First National photoplay, “Bits
of Life,” which is playing at the Pal-
ace Theater today.
The problem of overcoming the
complaint of the late arrivals in tne
theater, who come in the middle of
a feature and are compelled to guess
what the story is all about for five
or six reels, is materially lessened in
“Bits of Life,” due to the fact that
each of the four stories which form
the basis of the production require
nervous feelings and
a weak stomach. I
had been this way
about a year and was
unable to work or
stand on my feet for
any length of time.
My husband’s aunt
told me how much
good Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable
Compound had done
boss,” with little or no effect.
Enraged at this he gave chase to
the bear, which fled, still clinging to
the calf. After a wild chase through
the dense forests which litter Sussex
county, particularly near the curb
lines, the bear lost his temper and the
calf at the same time and turned irri-
tably toward his pursuer. Mr. Cum-
mings noting the angry expression in
the bear’s eye hurried to the nearest
giant of the forest and crawled to the
highest branch, from whence he was
released by his neighbors. The bear
got away.
Heavyweight Takeo Light Bride.
Winton, Conn.—Henry A Hurlbut, a
councilman, was married a few days
ago to Miss Roxanna Spooner Hurl-
but weighs 405 pounds His bride tips
the scales at 99.
The “Ed" referred to in the note is
Mrs. Rush’s husband, Edward Rush, a
former resident of Washington, Pa,
and an electrician. He died in the
Dixmont hospital, according to Mrs.
Mrs. Marie Laughlin, a sister of the
dead woman.
“When I say that I weigh twenty-
five pounds more than I did a short
time ago it speaks volumes for the
■merit of Tanlac,” said Jos. B. Drake,
430 Belmont, Ave., Springfield, Mass.
| “The first thing Tanlac did for me
was to give me an appetite and tone
' up my stomach. It wasn’t long be-
! fore I was eating things I hadn't
I dared touch for years and anyone to
। see the hearty way I eat now would
find it hard to believe that a few
weeks ago I was dyspeptic and liv-
! ing on the lightest kind of diet.
' I “Another good thing Tanlac did for
| me was to drive the rheumatism al-
most entirely out of my system. In
, I fact, I can truthfully say it has made
l| l me feel like a new man in every way.
Haunted Her Day and Night.
paid only $4 a week, and it took that
to keep John and Harry in the Sun-
shine Home. When Ed died I was left
to care for the children, and then I
couldn't keep them and myself on the
salary I could earn, and I had to do
something else. I have seen Ed late-
ly, and he is calling me to him in
heaven, and I am going to meet him
there. Forgive me, dear sister, and
don't let my boy and girl know of the
awful fate of their mother. Let this
be a warning to others who might
want to lead the life I have led. Your
Denver, Colo.—Two companies of
flramen were called out to rescue W.
A Tracy from a five-inch ledge skirt.
Ing the seventh story of a downtown
hotel. Tracy, who, according to the
police, was crazed with drugs, had
climbed out of a window and crawled
about sixty feet along the ledge when
discovered. While fireman were at-
tempting to rescue Tracy with ladders,
a member of another department las
seed him from a nearby window and
dragged him to safety
DR. E. H. COWAN
Specialist
Ten years experience in Hospital
for Women, Backward and De-
formed Children. 2081k Washing-
ton Ave, Marshall, Texas. Office
Phone 1060, Res. Phone 1048.
aquare. Phone 408.
BITS OF
F LIFE
Dr. W. E. Harrington
Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat
Office over Western Union Office
Hours 9 to 12, 2 to 6
Office 780; Residence 1195-
Mourned Life She Led.
Following is the note left by the mings on his way to Jennings’ home
----- 1 saw the theft and yelled “Shoo there
Grandeon Acted as Boot Man.
Topsfield. Maae—John F. Osborne
acted as beet man when his grand-
father, John Romanzo Osborne, of
Pittsfield, N. H, was married to Alice
Ropes Smith in this town.
Athens, Ga—R. E. Burton of Col-
bert, married only a few weeks sgo,
lost his wife in a motion picture house
here recently. In Athens for shop-
ping, he decided to buy his bride a
gift and took her to the "movie” to
wait until he had done his purchasing.
Returning, he searched the picture
bouse over three times, and, failing to
find her, reluctantly left for his home
on the evening train, hoping that she
bad found a car or buggy among
the relatives here for the day, and,
having missed him, was on the way to
greet him at home.
He failed to find her at home, and
nobody had seen her. The young man
was almost prostrated with anxiety
and uneasiness. In the meantime the
young wife sat patiently awaiting his
return—from four o’clock in the after
noon until the house closed at eleven
at night. She saw him enter the
house, she stated, and wondered why
he did not join her and sit a picture
through. She spent the night with
friends here, who phoned her hus-
band's relatives, the nearest way they
could reach him. about midnight
“The Fox”
You never saw anything like it
before. Also—
CHARLIE CHAPLIN in
“The Bank”
and
“WINNERS OF THE WEST’
thing,” Hugh Wiley’s “Hop,” and
Marshall Neilan’s “The Strange Ad-
venture.”
The members of the cast include
Wesley Barry, John Bowers, Teddy
Sampson, Dorothy Mackail, Edythe
Chapman, Frederick Burton, James
Neil, Lon Chaney, Noah Beery, Har-
riett Hammond, Anna May Wong,
James Bradbury, Jr., Rockliffe Fei-
lowes and Tammany Young.
FOR SALR
Come and see my fine flock of Bar
red Plymouth Rocks before you bu
either eggs or breeding stock. I hav
bred them 25 years. C. F. ADAMS
51
1 Pittsburgh.— Fear-stricken and re-
morseful as a result of the nightiy
visits of what she believed to be the
ghost of her dead husband remon-
strating with her for the life she had
been leading, a woman listed at the
morgue as Mrs Anna Shaw, aged
thirty-three years, but whose last
1 name is said by her sister to be Rush,
took her own life at her home, by
swallowing a quantity of poisonous
disinfectant.
After swallowing the poison, the
woman is said to have written a letter
to a sister telling of her life since the I
death of her husband in the Dixmont
Hospital for the insane, six months
ago. and warning other women not to
follow in her steps.
Ghost Remonstrated With Her.
ALWAYS HAUNTED HER inKoraraxdboowtastngblenaseao
■ Ik— and begged me to
try it, so I did. All my pains and weak-
ness are gone, my stomach is all right
and I do my work at home and also work
for Swift’s Packing Company. I recom-
mend your Vegetable Compound to my
friends and you may publish my letter
as a testimonial.”—Mrs. Lulu LUCAS,
719A Vandeventer St., St. Louis, Mo.
Again and again one woman tells an-
other of the merit of Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
You who work must keep yourself
strong and well. You can’t work if you
are suffering from such troubles. Mrs.
Lucas couldn’t. She tried our Vegeta-
ble Compound and her letter tells you
what it did for her. Give Lydia E Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial
now.
According to other residents of the
house where Mrs. Shaw resided with
her two children, the woman had been |
in constant fear for the past several .
weeks because, she said, the ghostly |
figure of her husband confronted her
only from one to two reels to tell at every turn, both day and night beck
before another complete plot is start- oning her to come, and remonstrating i
ed. । with her because she was not leading!
Further, Marshall Neilan caters to ( a proper life.
every kind of motion picture appetite, : The woman, after swallowing the
in that “Bits of Life” offers satire, poison, lived an hour, in which time '
St. Louis, Mo. — "I had troubles that
all women are apt to have, with pains in
IIIIIIIIL1111III1I lmT back, weak, tired.
gaa
4 S(Sries
14 stars
inetuding
“Wosley barry
. LoCha:
square. Phone 408.
NOTICE.
We still have a few of those good
Stevens tires left, 30x3 1-2, $9.00;
30x3, VIM. These tires are strictly
guaranteed, fresh from the factory
and well worth the money. LET US
SHOW YOU. EAST TEXAS VUL-
CANIZING COMPANY, west side of
Paris.—A French officer who was
badly wounded and made prisoner was
taken before the crown prince of Ger-
many. In a letter be wrote to his
boms, be said he was most favorably
impressed by the prince. He is slen-
der and very refined in bearing and
speaks French like an educated
Frenchman without the slightest ao
cent He wore a helmet over which
was a cover and be had not the slight-
eat badge or stripe which would be-
tray his rank.
«
N
Special sale of used auto parts, be-
ginning today, we will sell for 30 days
at one-half the price we have been
getting, parts for the following ears:
Buick, Hupmobile, Studebaker, Max-
well, Overlands 75, 83 and 90, E. M.
F., Chevrolet, Saxon, Ford, Gram,
Pullman, Briscoe, Dort, Oakland.
Motor blocks guaranteed $5 to $10;
wheels $1 to 83; all rims $i. Frames
$2.50; bodies $2.50; tops $2.50; car-
buretors $3 each; speedometers $1;
connecting rods and piston head $1;
rear axles $1.50; other parts too num-
erous to mention low enough to suit
any purchaser. First come, first serv-
ed. South Washington Ave., at cross-
ing of M. & E T. Ry.
ECONOMY MFG. CO.
224p P. C. Post, Mgr.
Dr. W. H. Bennett
Physician and Surgeon
Marshall National Bank Building
Phones: Office 149; Residence 641
13]
each story being portrayed by a di: j The woman’s own story, according I
ferent cast, the producer was enabled । 10 the residents of the house, was that Chased Bifl Up a Tree.
to obtain the most prominent artists she 9s aakened early.in ‘husband i through the underbrush The bear in
foreventhe on stnrin “Bits t Life" Despondene, sh “id. because the ng question, probably the most impolite
The. stories.o n-which. vswiuite. ure haunted her both day and night J and daring ever seen about Montague,
are based are Thomas McMorrow 8 she went to a bathroom and drank I is reported to have waddled into the
corral of Charles Jennings, where it
When you look at “The Fox,” the
Harry Carey picture now showing at
the Grand Theater, you are not mere,
ly seeing a screen production—you
are beholding scenes from real life.
Among the most interesting of those
scenes are those in which cavalry is
seen in action on the desert.
These troops of cavalry are not
moving-picture troops composed of
a mob of extra men; but a part of
the eleventh regular United States
cavalry from the presidio at Monte-
rey.
The almost unprecedented order,
sending troops into the field to par-
ticipate in the making of a moving
picture, was obtained by Irving G. 1
Thalberg, director-general at Univer-
sal City, through Major General Muir,
commanding general of the Ninth
Corps Area, who authorized Col. John
M. Jenkins, commanding at the Mon-
terey Piesidio, to detach the troops
for the purpose of going into the
field to make pictures with Harry
Carey.
When Harry Carey wrote “The Fox '
he incorporated heroic actions for the
regulars with the idea of giving in-
ternational prominence to the effi-
ciency of American troops under all
circumstances.
LAST ,
nAV ) BEST PICTURES & MUSIC
IIILVIIU
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 147, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 25, 1922, newspaper, February 25, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1406895/m1/2/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .