Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 42, Ed. 1 Monday, September 13, 1920 Page: 6 of 8
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mWJaC^^
ESS
'v
DEMOCRAT
""""i ". '•■*
.)
on Sunday.
a.
k;W.'.r-
ed Tbursdm/b.
L - - -,u
r • « « • « * * W it« • • ♦ •'« 4 M ♦ 110 AH^^Ill.
;i^|^i^. j' J |' '
at Sherman, Texan, Aug.
according to the act
!•-" ' " "
ifiiiM
matt to
■ 14, 18Tfl^ilp|W
of Congress, Mar. 8, 1870.
and Oklahoma: One month,
Beyond TViaa and Oklahoma
; Six-months, 14.00; One year,
y2 KMi, " i *** • mmm
JB sha-wiSi!!^^
^PPl^pige glvte old addr«||as well aa t*yi;<li<M^^,|||
"of THK ASSOCIATED pi^ess. TIie AiWoclatcd Prww Is
ply entitled to the use for republication of all new* dispatches credited
iiui 11hmwlaw III mini in llrti ihiii I and also the loo*I new* published
, All rigbta of republication of special dbqsitcbes herein are also ra-
J Talt of
Flatwoods
ANDCR50H
fm
Mm.
HI;
i
tl
[
Ht
I
the DEMOCRATS PLATFORM: |
Bluer
Down town
Improved highway system.
Representative County Fnlr.
Execution of the Kessier plan.
THE DAY'S BEST EDITORIAL. I
J $
C.OVERNT
*
ruther
popstfa
defter.'
■H
b*yo
erjr of
mis
iioaewr. ■* 80 is a
t'ox han^dmin
■p
jjynvri uoi
no pfcdu£, unlcSM such things an driv-
ing a race horse on one of tiia„uorth-
ern 4 rack* > ™&t. That waa a harm-
less indulgence. The Democratic can-
didate lias been busy <m thes firing
line. \0 HI* shots have hit their ln-
;. tended marks. , " ■ < h <^4:
Testimony liefore th* investigating
committee^t C-hicago ha*
bin < !ia nn>" of Jfopubllc* ri purpose a ml
method* in raising u iutge campaign
fund. Statements rigorously denied by
thee Republican money-raisers liave
been shown to be true In the muln.
Form 101. which some Republicans
hinfed was1 a erention of the Cox
fancy, ha* la-en la-ought to light. The
quota method, admittedly, is being cm-
ployed in many 4 mricai) cities, Tf
Oovernor Cox was at fault at all it
was iu that lie understated some of
I he fact*,
There ,i* nothing demagogic in ids
demand for a specific statement from
Senator I larding on the Ix^iguc of
Nations or some substitute plan.
Theae might l>e room for such criti-
cism if (Jpv«-rnar Cox left the nation
In doubtps to Ida own pordjtfou on the
league. Re hasn't done that. On the
contrary, he Is championing the Lea-
gue with Victor at every point touched
in hi* Weibt'ern cnmitaigu and iu Ian-
guage that can leave no question of
ills sincerity. ,
The labor quc«tlnn ami other snch
questions hnv
gle<| with
date. The counter-charge* from the
Itepnhlimn ranks are solely due tjf
the fact thai Cos has the whole hunch
■ ' ' « • * XI'.AR Jr. f.' ■ • ii^-ffQl \ av «
Trenil of Wheat Prices.
Wall Ktacoet Journal:
A downward, though not abrupt, ir-
regular or disturbing trend of wheat
prices wrttrtd seem on the«way. to on
«veraprice below either the Ameri-
can or C-atfadhin <iov >riuueat .figure*
for Upk it not a question of Cu-
nadiau'.-'Judgment or Amerhirtl Judg-
ment. or regulation. It te a matter of
the average market judgment of every
otgaiuM* community • In the world.
CMfflteafons by wt«lgbing a
wortrWM9rt-.sni.piy wldr«* may #
\ 4.lMkM^.0"d h'dtjbels against
ytifrted demand* of the consumers
bf While, bread.
Not, only a« the price nf IIa* {{real-,
est primary eommmlity now in I he
making, but ir in iu the making along
sound tin** of supply and dunuind.
with a heavier pres^nw* of aupply than
was anticipant or at least « tiiei«lly
d^rusmyt AVltl, the jmsslMe t«4-eplioa
of tla p«itato- which oanmd. refrfaop'
wheat^-the latter is pie wojrld'n-moat
favored crop, Indigenous or adapt-
able to nearly all soils, with vitality,
stamina and reprodlief 1 vity which i ld
defiant* to nearly aTT clTim s, repaying
the inclemency of frigid zones by
wearing a heavier coat, to contain
thore gluten and even, a more pomler-
«nis kernel.
* AngUNt 2.1, 1020, Chicago December
wheat broke suddenly 1 cent* per
iHiahel. It is admitted Argentina's
JO'Jii export surplus in much larger
than published statistics indicated.
Australia's wheat crop is .*4) per wit
al ove the HMO yield. Yet perhaps a
more convincing argument to Iji Salle
Street was the 10 j;cnt break In the
\VlnniiK«g fK*toi>er option.
An exceptional option mouth, shown
only on the Winnipeg hoard, October
on the average, covers the heaviest
thirty-day crop movement period in
Western Canada. IIut IIIthHWHging Is
dour of "long' or bought wheat in
that month. It may be called a c sh
month. It Invariably shows great re-
sistance to merely aptHtulatlve selling
pressure.
Trading in the October future in
Winnipeg was not iH'nnltted until Au-
gunt IN, ll>20, days after Chicago
resumed the full exercise of lier own
spurs?'
*ft«r a ttm*
I a famous sdl-
'"004s anjfl
t
iVNOPwab
CHAPTER I. having known his
taih«r, ar,.i living with hi* >noth r on a
houseboat on th* Wabash rtvor, "Tha
Pearl hunter"—th« onljr nam* h« haa—
laarna tram hor a part oti ih« sp ry of
har sad Ufa. Tha recital is interrupted toy
a tearful .flfc of couRhln* and ha hurrtoafl
ashoro to a«ak a root that afford* raltet
Returning with the root, he meet* a
young girl whom he mentally christen*
the "Wild Rose." She elude* him before
ha can make har acquaintance 1.j:v;vV;J1
,_^SfA'PTKR "«.^A.. vacaat cabin on tha
shore has attracted th* attention of the
ailing woman, and they move Into it
Their flret meal Is Interrupted by a
who reeente their presence. Th*
drive* th* man from thai* hom*.
hKa itraasaly aff*otc<l VOt?
mother. That night the youth finds wlth-
I«l a moasd th* largest pearl that has
" on tha river, th* -Blue Moon."
tundng exultant' to. th* cabin, h* dls-
have not been dodged or jug-1 functions as a free and open market,
.bv the Ih>iuocratic candl-lTh<> <>etober future opened at 2.05,
he mmitff44i.MH from ti>« roae to 2.71. and closcsl August :u ,
on the defensive, us he has had from
'the Ix'glntiing of the camitfilgn. And j teen days to 2.0t , rebounded to
indirntioua are that he proposes to'and on August .".it closed at 2::i.1.
1020,. at 2.0U, agains^, 2.47 for Winnl
peg December.
Chicago December wheat oiwued
.Inly 15, 11>2tt, at 2.75, declined tn fit-
12,
keep thehi that way from now until
tfa£L_d teJof=fbeeleetlon. •.
Cox is'no liypocrite, young Itoose-!
veil's charge to the contrary. He Is a
strategist,; ah accurate marksumn, a
campaigner and a mover.
STATE DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM
IS CONSTRI'CTI V E.
The T^rmocratic platform adopted at
Fort Worth was, In the main, affirma-
tive, declarative ami constructive.
According praise where praise was
due; it proceeded to pledge tile party
to educational* governmental. and
highway improvement, 'to betterment.
Of agricultural conditions and market
lug facilities, to promotion of iieallh
and sanitation, to encouragement of
home ownership through State aid, to
conservation of resources, and to a re-
apportionment of Texas into congres-
sional, .senatorial ami le^ft'scntatlve
district*,;as thp Constitution reqnlras.
There- was no reconunemlatiou of a
"corrupt practices" act. however, such
" jis had heen urged in advance of the
«*onvention. for "Hie purpose of punish^"
lug candidate for OtJice who are guilty
of circulating false Information or mis-
reprcseutalions against (heir op|><>-
iicnts iflfi^ future. Tiiere is need .of a
law of that sort, if Texas politics h
* to Ik? rid of personalities in futuro.
It is to.l e hoped some such legislative
action !*• taken, without waiting for
the mandate of u State convention.
There has been too great war as
well as experimental dislocation of
prices to suy what the average value
of 1020 world wheat is to be. Fore-
casts have ranged from .1*1.."VO to $:t
t er bushel. With but rumors of wars
to bolster prices, little resistance i-«
shown to the pressure of bumper Aus-
tralian,*Canudinn and American crops,
and unelcpeetedly more old Argentine
wheat, on the export market.
The Daily Program.
MrK. (Toodsole—I am soliciting for
the poor. What do you do with your
cast-off clothingV
Mr. I^oagsuffei'er-rsI , hang them up
carefully ami pur on my pajamas. Then
I resume them in the morning.— IV-
troit News,
been found on the river, th* "Blu* Moon.'
aeturnlag
covers his mothar dead. Shs having «uc-
cumb*d wbU* endeavoring to leav* a
message r*v«aliag the e^-n-*t hU par-
•a**®-
CHAPTER m.-At th* viTlaga of fafl**
Rock, to li'htch he takes th* gem for
k*e£l3|b« "i'earlhunter" meet*
stranger who had disturbed his mother
in their cabin, and Insult* him. Th*y
part as bitter enemies.
CHApTBR IV. ~^ln th* vttlag* th*
"Peaylhunter" see* th* girl who had at«
tree Led his attention in tha woods. She
Is annoyA by the stranger, and th*
"F*arlhunter" rescues her from hi* un-
welcome attention*. K* accompanies her
to her hom*.
dfipffiS V.—At th* hous* hi meets
the father of his "Wild Roso," known to
th* locality a* th* "Wild Man," mentally
Irresponsible as ths result of a wound re-
ceived from a man Wearing a red mask,
jl notorious desperado. Th* youth de-
clares hia intention of devoting iha
rjoney he is to get for th* p*arl to pay-
ing for a sorglaal operation which wUl
restore the old man's reason.
CHAPTER VI-In the cabin that night
th* "Fearlhnnter" Is aroused from sleep
by th* stealthy visit of a man who con-
ceals a red mask In th* wall and makes
his escape, Th* "Pearlhunter," mystified,
aud *u*poct!n* foul phiy, destroy* It.
Next day Loul* Solomon, pearl buyer,
purchases tlie gem for (6,000.
—
CHAPTER VIT—Sototnort aoeompnnte*
the youth to his cabin ond within a few
minutes of their parting the pearl buyer
Is stabbed and robbed of the s*in. The
"Pearlhunter" Is charged with th* mur-
der and robbery and In saved from lynch-
ing by the intervention of the sheriff.
The mob believes the "Pearlhunter" Is
the "Red Mask." Ho Is confined In the
village lockup.
CHAPTER VITT.—'The stranger offers to
s«cure the release of the "Pearlhiinter" If
he will promts* to leave tl *«snclnity. The
youth rrfua«s*. Made desperate by the
stranger's threats of harming the girl,
the young man pries the bars from th*
window of his cell and escapes.
CEJAPTER IX.—Oolng at once to ^e
home of his "Wild, Rose," he tells the
girl the whole story of the selling of the
gem, ths murder of Louie Solomon, and
his accusation of being the "Red Mask."
The girl believes him Innocent, and he
leaves, the draft he had recaivisi for tit*
gem with her. ltciurnlng to his cabin,
the "Pearlhunter" ' lindH th<.« murderer
there, and the latter umvltt>', t!y discloses
to the youth his hiding plate, a cave un-
der a waterfall.
CHAPTER X.—On the departure of the'
desperado the "Pearlhunter" visits the
cave itmd. discovers certain proof that it
is iht. "Red Mask's"'retreat. Hiding from
his Issuers, in a rocky cranny in the
woocta he is nerlously wounded by a
chan * shot llred bv a member of the
posse Starching for hlrn.
CHAPTER XI. - Helpless from Ms
wound, the "Pearlhunter" is found by
the "Wild Rose" and faken by her to
her home. The '•*rte-tl Musk" attempts fo
enter the cabin but is driven away by the
girl, who threatens to shoot him. The
"Pearlhuntei" would follow him, but the
"Wild Hose" Insists he Ik not strong
enough, mil het. -If taki,« the trail of the
renegade, both of them realizing how
Important it Is to !;t)ow what the next
movements of the "l;ud Mask" are to b*.
% mwmm KAli - HLw*!*-
"And you keep them shining bright
like thatr V#
"Alwayaf
The man wap if Vnt R long time. On©
other question hi. :omo tov him, but
bo dreadgd to aikla He twistsd him-
self around so t,9 to look Into the face
ot his companion. It wa i,.rtleeply
thoughtful. Things had recently hap-
pened In his ow$ life that hod brought
the question to bis mind. Finally very
softly, reverent':?, he ventured it forth.
"And your iMOfhcrf' , '
The girl caught her breath: dropped
one hand, doubts i.*mconsciou ly, up-
on his shoulder^, «/• r lasbea droopeil
w® CT•
; "I never saw her" <x mid, after
a time. "And ahe—asaw me!"
There was a pause. ' er grave is
on a hill that overlook' he river. Dad-
dy took me and camc dp herp Ip the
Plot woods to forget. I guesa he
couldn't forget, for he never went
The Pesrlhunter was sorry he had
asked the question. The grave that
overlooked the river I Was there not
nnother such grave—not three days
old; the orchids upon It still alive,!
Tha gray eyes fallowed Ihe blue Into
thh pensive shadows.
13, 1
fhncy ^
■■in ii'a ?a!jss
ovtt it
"The wow
for yon—and
lowed the wo
of hig life—pit;).«)
i'
tly. up-
h great
The
1 slipped away into
hia arm and lah
: next Instant he
the gatherlpc i
Buried iii tho rushes, he afMii^d a
second to %>ok back. She waa stUlMn
the dark frame of the door.
[ A sound llk the passing of a whis-
per, like tha breeza pitying with soft
leaves, caught his quick ear. A gray
ghost—the Wild Man of tile Flatwoods
—flitted along, under the cliffs and en-
tered the cabin. ■'*.£
m
CHArrw XIII.
. .;,7
.Maybe They Were KirIiI. :ii 'Dial.
Mir: Hack from Mnnllit, atul linvt
been wtatrluK n tuohnir suit. My
I'fiernlN nil nsk : "Where tlhlyon pick
up that HiiitV" "Hongkong." I reply. "I
thought so," in Ihcir coino-hink. "You
can't buy t suit like lhut in this
country." 1 pttrcftnued thesr clothes
ill slpplin, Mo, S. N„ t'hltjiKO Trlh-
une.
n)1Tou (hurt reckon—V
"Ileckon! It'n n plain cn«e. I.et's
sci1- r-vci y month—six hundred n year
—sevt n years—seven times six hun-
dred—no wonder he could build that
new house—"
"Oh, well! 1'oor old man! He's
paying for It."
"And do'you think that's the way a
man payaT' /
^Sometimes—maybe,"
tatetl hnlf aloud. "You are to fall holr
t hla fortune. lf,l\o,wor,d comes. What
word, do you suppose? And why
'should any word prevent you falling
heir to his fortune,—your father's?"
"I wondered about that. I guess it's
Just lawyer talk. Do yon think I
should answer tljat letter?"
"I think yon should."
"But what wouljjl luay? As I saW"
a while ago. 1 wfer wrote /( letter."
VjCeithai'Writ V lie saw the answer
did' iwt relieve the perplexity on the
tluniarlitful face.,hnd went nn. "But.
I'd tell him about .vour life here, and
ahout your father's—accident, and
that this Is the first letter you've re-
ceived, for jeven years." He hjraitated,
seemed to stndy his next womc^ftaaily
adtled: "And i believe I'd nsk him to
cube; yes, I hcTlcve 1 would—ask him
to come." ::
"Why, of course; why couldn't 1
think of that? BToW you'd hatter . lie
down while I get you u mite of sup-
per."
In an instant lie was on his feet,
protesting.
"I shall have to get supper for
Daddy, anyhow," she .emphasized.
"And I wouldn't think of letting you
go without.""
When a woman -tnlks like that, It's
no use to argu<v The l'eajrthuntet.
didn't—which shows that he wr
learning—fast.
"Will you eat with me again?"
She swept him a deep courtesy
"If the famous finder of the .ie
Moon Is not ashamed to ent w.' nis
cook—
He bowed low. It cost hlr-, Mg
In his side, but IT didn't i • 1 - his
face. ,j; ' "i JI • \J
"If the rich liof-ess.'M ' Henpf
Dawn, is n<it al>o^. eating the •
the Pearlhunter—^
Wonderful is thet-eslllenee of youth.
With a gay laugh she danced away to
the kitchen. He tramped after her.
His two Old friends, the Boss and
dour-faced Bull Masterson, would
have been astonished at the sounds
that came through that kitchen door.
-H'he slow, deliberate, serious-faced
I'earlhunter! He was dancing about
the cook stove, currying dishes, nnd
laughing m lightly as If half the
neighborhood was not out hunting him
with every sort of weupon the Flat-
woods could furnish.
That supper! Bacon and egirs,
brown toast, and coffee! And the
hands that poured that coffee and put
the sugar In. and spread the toast! It
had, to be eaten In semltlnrknesf), for It
wouldn't do to risk a candle—semi-
darkness, but not in. silence. He for-
got that the girl Just around the cor-
ner of the table had ttlrned out to he
a rich heiress—ihe "princess" of his
fairy story—while he wns only the
l'earlhunler—a man without a name.
Twilight at the ,windows warned
hlrn that the dark was hovering like a
night rnven over the woods, fils time
had come. The bUKlnW* of 9 man w&s
afoot. k
She closed the stove hearth to hide
the fire light. He opened the cant
door of the kitchen, once more the
grave, cautious woodsman. She held
out her hand; he laid it upon the arm
In the sting; covered"^ with bis own.'
"Wild Hose!" he said. "You'll al-
ways he that, no matter what they call
you.
TN 8h*rifP* Nudge.
The sheriff's ham stood against tho
hillside, the distance of half a block
back of his house. He had bten In the
saddle most of th# day. It woe dark
when W rode into bis barn lot to put
up hla tired horse.
>iSo Intent waa ho ttpoa hla task, so
en gar to hurry It over nnd get back to
the house to supper, that he failed to
notice a dark form stealing down off
the bluff, through the bushes, ftnd
along the burn wall.
The task finished, the sherjff closed
the bam door and turned toward tho
house.
"8h-h!" !
He whirled, apd fount* himscif gaz-
ing down the wrong end of tf steady
sl^-gun in the hand of tho very man
he had been hunting alt day. The
sheriff was n brave man, lmt he knew
where bravery ends ami foolhardlnest
begins. His hands went up as quick*
ly fs he could get them up. The man
with the tig-gun carried his arm In a
sling. It must have cost him torture
to take it out, but he did It ; rcatbe'l
oveu ond plucked the sheriff's revolver
out of his holster, thrust it lute hla
biouRe and put bis arm back Into the
sling,
"Listen!" There was nO mlaundep-
standing that whisper. "Ill not huit
you If you do as I sny. Creep up the
hill to the top of the bluff. Keep out
of sight as much as possible. I'll bo
right behind you."
The sheriff was not a brilliant man,
but ha did hove a saving grain of
horse sense. He < t—along tha
bam. .itaJJU ua^Ui^ .y—^ through the
hushes and into the *k woods at
the top of the hiufl'. ' shadow be-
hind him was noiseless it he knew
that It was there.
' "To Fallen Rock," cn n low, In-
cisive command. "You kru. *ie way."
lie knew the way. Hf . - it He
never liked to remember ,M ionrney.
It brouglit the sweat out « is head
to m-all it. Not even a niff^-a
Flatwoods sheriff, to boot—li • stom-
ach for a tramp through tlu turk at
the point of n six-gun in the hands of
'such a man.
At the spring around back of the
west end of the old cabin, he liesl-
tafe0, undecided, whether that was. tho.
fin?l destination, and yot dreadipg to
make the mistake, if it wasn't. Tlie
gun muzzle prodded him onto tlie brink
of Tim pool under the falls. Barely
out of reach of the spray, the ahadiv
came around nnd, faced, him.
"You tl • r>s 'he lied Mask. . ft*
whole 'to* titi i ain. Like a pneic
of hor.n/ m:ed me today, but
vou h* v::o;'«j man. The real
; one••' the pack. That
^ is your main"
str,' d. Tha^cold voice
v i <-U* f 4 I :sf.. , <
ever kjiow him to buy a
n? Did you ever "hear f
bought?"
IT w r >.• y Ised to find 'tl
is ff.
t . d> Me dellbei* t -
; ,|i rr* • * of Leuin
. t si muc-
)wj«I
JL
I
%
T t'
I
Sometimes, when folks order'a telephone,
they say: "It won't tnke youUl t few miii-
uler. to install it, because the wire* are at-
[iia^y on the houfc>tfcW|;.>^I
ft. iifl
,'.1/
1
The circuit fr<>m tl*e house all the way to
the telephone exchange is the one that really
counts-** . ^
That ^ circuit released—used fir some
other subscribers--^when a telephone is re-
ift^ved.
'■ 'r-ff 1 i-".'^
Another must bt built up for you Mare
your .• tilephopl' can be installed, and thut> ^
takes lime and work—
m
ep>
^ - >y" « . , " "*■ "'JJ* "" ^ ~t d
ff w niiHute fr to install a t^wspltione—
(hero is a sreat deal more to do than ajmply;
to fasten tlie instrument on your wall!
m
rour Service"
a?
*tt|''
wt
m
>«•
mm
■'■W0*
♦
WtMMM
pPsUR'
' s,-1*'
m
tr
T"
J®BS
iBp.
1,1
it;*:
■mj
a package
before the war
a package v
durinsi the war
niloi
jfjti
W
and
a package
The Flavor Lasts
So Does the Price!
(To Be Continued.)
Traveling On a Slow Lane.
(From the Boston Transcript.) -
"This lino iu your baud," hhuI the
Rirl who Itad studied palmistry, 'indi-
nttes tliat you have a hrlll'ant future
before you."
"I* that so?" queried the dense
younjx man.
"Vcm." coiilinueti the maid. "lutt
this other line Indicates tliut you artt
too slow to.overtakcrlt."**" 1
When it con >s to campaign contri-
butions, the i o.-t Imimrtant. thing to
a i <Jitlctil, •*.t"l,hie is a de|>endabl(^
J • lliufflei1.—x olUutbin fS. C.T Tfecofd.
A-151
HOME, SWEET HOME—WEI,I,! WELL!
AT LAST GEOKCE CUTS ONE OVER
Copyright. 1920. hv the Mail & Express Co.
m
& t r* r / // vr/\ f
By H. J. TUTHILL
At Jeffersoa City, Mo., a btihy saved
its mother from going to prison. Yet
aome iK«opIe don't Ix'lieve in babies.
In other, words. Senator Harding
thinks the Farm Loan Act. would he
nil right if a Republican Congress had
passed it*
A beallh *pceiallst Kays: 'Keep
well." Tlwre it- goes again—this for-
ever ding-donlng a fellow about taking
& bath.-^r
ANOTIAEP MEW HAT-
lT'& A. FRIGHT*I M
VO'J DO.MT KNiOW
WOW ^oiuuv
you
We were just woialering if enough
people travel tho path to Seunttir
Harding's fnmt porch these rainy tbiys
to k«* p.ttie weectjK down.
A brUliant writer says there Is no
way to live foreycr, and if there wa*
no one would want to know 4tr Weil,
just to *tn i1 hlht Oil. If lie has a gua r
ontoed iH-l|s-, wc will buy the first
popy; Jv'M;
I VO 0ELIEVE VOO'RK WMAPPyE
COLOR 0LINO-ANP TKO'O'aj T^YlM
HAT -SALESMEN TAKE 00 ^
advantage or it- toa\i4ow&ooy
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Sherman Daily Democrat (Sherman, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 42, Ed. 1 Monday, September 13, 1920, newspaper, September 13, 1920; Sherman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth194087/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .