The Rusk Cherokeean (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, October 14, 1921 Page: 3 of 10
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THE RUSK CHEROKEEAN
IKES CUE
OF 5 CHILDREN
Mr*. Taylor's Sickness Ended
by Lydia EL Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
ftoxbury, Mass.—"I suffered contin-
ually with backache and was often de-
spondent, had dizzy
1 spells and at my
I monthly periods it
| was almost impos-
sible to keep around
at my work. Since
my last baby came
two years ago my
back nas been worse
land no position I
Icould get in would
■relieve it, and doc-
Itor's medicine did
Inothelp me. Afriend
recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound and 1 have found great
relief since using it. My back is much
better and I can sleep well. I keep
house and have the care of five children
so my work is very trying and I am very
thankful I have found the Compound
such a help. 1 recommend it to my
friend3 and if you wish to use this letter
1 am very glad to help any woman suf-
fering as I was until I used Lyd'a E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."—
Mrs. Maude E. Taylor, 6 St. James
Place, Roxbury, Mass.
Backache is one of the most common
symptoms of a displacementor derange-
ment of the female system. No woman
should make the mistake of trying to
overcome it by heroic endurance, but
profit by Mrs. Taylor's experience and try
LydiaE. Pinkham's VegetableCompound
Keep Your Skin-Pores
Active and Healthy
With Cuticura Soap
Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Tele am 25c.
THE MARKETS
State News
I
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
RemoTcfOanarutT S tops Hair Falling
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Haj
lot?. .ifid $ i.oo at Prujrtrlsta.
Chcm. Wka. Patdmi"i",y. Y.
HfNDERCORNS HemoTDS Corn*. Cat-
Jour.es. etc., stops all puin, ensures comfort to tlio
e .
teeU makes walking ea*v. 15a. by mail or at Druc>
gists, lilscox Client leal Woxka, l'atcUucue, N. If.
MITCHELL
EYE SALVE
bring* relief to inflamed eyes, jrran-
ulat#>d lids, styes, etc. A wimple,
ii" dependable, absolutely safe remedy.
25c — all druggists or by mail from
XjU/a<. HA I.L£ RdCKKL, Inc.
nVipS 14 7 Waver!* Fl., Npw York
WEAK SORE EYES
& ITCH!
I Money back without quest von
if HUNTS GUARANTEED
SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES
(Hunt's Salve and Soap), fail In
the treatment of Itch, Eczema,
Ringworm,Tetter or other itch-
in* kindii>ease*.Try th>s treat-
ment nt our risk Sold by all reliable tiruccista.
A. U. Richards Medicine Co.. Sherman, Texas
fcwi.l'L l&KiAn JKK.^1.1 A1 AiCTlO' -
13 head of aeiect registered Jerseys, mules
and females, offered at auction at Waco,
Tex., Saturday, Nov. f>. during the Cot <>n
Palace Exposition. Write for catalogue Hulls
out of Register of Merit dams for sale at all
times. BD. C. I.ASATKR, Falfurrlas, Texas
LADIES
known. I.ib«ml proposition. I)R ('. It. HKHRV
COMPANY , 2'J/5 S. Michigan A/anno. Chioiur*
Probably.
"Why did Mrs. Dare chtinge her
hair froiu brown to goUlwn?"
"I believe it was to gratify her
husband's dyei-ns request."—London
Tit-Hits.
The ho\i« ewIfe smiles with satisfac-
tion as she looks at the basket of
clear, white clothes and thanks Red
Cross Rail Blue. At grocers, 5c.—
Advertisement
The man who lias a good reputation
may not be nble to realize the fun he
might have if he didn't.
Rhe always believes that her shoe®
look larger tlian they really are If
they feel comfortable.
8uppH«t'1 bv th« Wnr«« 'i of Market^
•Department of Agriculture, Washington,
,D. C.
WASHINGTON, D. C.. Oct. 10, 1921.—
Quotations for week ending Ortober 8
HAY:—Light tlading prevails in all
hay market**. Demand limited almost
ito local needs. Prices lower at New
{York and Cincinnati but steady at Chi-
cago and Kansas* City. KPceipts con-
tinue ligi't. Quoted Octo'ber 7: No. 1
alfalfa Kanchm City $1^. Memphis 1-4,
No. 1 Prairie Kansas City fltt.
* FEtel): Wheat mill feeds very weak.
Considerable distress bran being offered
in Chicago and Kansas City. Middlings
and shorts fairly firm. Cottonseed meal
dull but generally unchanged in price.
Corn feeds alco dull and some lower in
several markets. Alfalfa-meal slightly
lower and in light demand. Quoted
October 7, Spring bran New York $21,
Chicago f1f .2F>; Hard winter bran Kan-
sas City $9-10, Chicago $ 14.50-15; Stand-
ard middlings Chicago $16.50, Philadel-
phia $22: Unseed meal Chicago $S7, Cin-
cinnati $52.40; Cottonseed meal Kansas
City $39, Cincinnati $40, Memphis $36;
white hominy feed Chicago $20.50, yellow
$18.60. alfalf < meal Kansas Cit\ $17.
GRAIN: Wheat prices were under
Felling pressure during w.ek and pries
sagged to new low levels of season. Kx-
port sales of wheat weri slow and senti-
ment was mostly hear I Mi. Country offer-
ings in Northwest v-rv lib ral. heavy re-
cepits being expected at Winnipf g. Klr.-t
new c« rn of season appeared on market
from Illinois Corn prices also sagged to
new low marks. Closing prices in Chi-
cago cash markets: No. 2 r< d winter
wheat $1.25; No. 2 hard winter wheat
$1.10; No. 2 mixed corn 4.V: No. 2 yellow
corn 45c; No. 3 White (*>ats 3Jc. Fir the
week f'hicag r)ecemi *-r wheat l<>*t S l-4c
closing at $1.(19 1-fc December corn lost
1 1 -4c. < Jo«ing at 17 • • i: Minneapolis
December wheat lost 10 l-4c closing at
$1.20; Kansas ('it;. December wheat lo*t
9c closing at $1.01 1-2; Winnipeg Decem-
ber wheat lost 12c closing at *1.10 5-8.
Chicago May wheat closed at $1.14: May
corn at 53 l-4c; Minneapolis May wheat
at $1.20 1-2; Kansas City May wheit at
$1.05 1-2; Winnipeg May wheat at
$1.16 1-8.
DAIRY PRODCCTS: Butler markets
wire firm and prices showed an upwards
tenden< y. rirmnes-R due in large meas-
ure to sb< rtag. of fancy grades which
were in heaviest demand. I"nder-gr.ides
were draggv. S-.un ■ danish butter was
on market ;.t New York. Storage butter
began to move. Closing price for !'2
score: New York 46 I-2c: Chicago 45 1
Philadelphia 47c; Ronton 41c.
COTTON-Sort cotton pri e declined
90 p< ints during the week. « iosiiif.' at
19.8b- p- r II) New Y.''l; Octobei futures
down 88 points at 19.60.
LIVESTOCK /.ND MKATS:--Compared
with a Week ago. Chicago livef-tock
price swere generally higher, ('attli led
upward movement. Desirable corn feed
steers .and yearling showed net advances
of 50c-75c per 100 lbs. Butcher cows and
heifers were generally 2 5c-50c higher
with some heifers as much 7.* <- higher.
Stock erf and feeders k n'rally 25c high-
er. Hogs showed net advances ranging
from 35c-75c. Practically all grades of
sheep and lambs were 25c higher with
spots 50c higher. October 8. Chicago
prices: Hob's, top $8.70 bulk of saies
$7.25-8 60; medium and good berf steers
$6.15-10.40; butcher cows and heifers
$3.65-9.50; feeding steers ?4 85-6.85. light
and medium weight veil calves $5 50-
$11.25; fat lambs $7.75-*9.26; feeding
lambs *6-$7; yearlings ?5.25-$7.25: fat
ewes $3-t5. Sto« ktr and feeder ship-
ments from 11 important markets during
the week ending September 30 were: ('at-
tic and calves 101,677; hogs 6,840; sheep
126.922
With th<* exception of veal, eastern
wlioelcalc fresh meat prices were practi-
cally s*ead>- with those of a week ago.
Reef lamb and pork loins were unchang-
ed. Mutton was generally steady though
one maraet reported a *'? decline on good
grade ment. Veal ranged from ?1-2 low-
er per 100 lbs. October 7. prices good
grade meats: Reef $13.50-115: veal $16*
$J8; lamb $16-*18; mutton $11-$12:
FIRE DESTilim BARN;
14 HEAD LIVESTOCK DIE
Waxahachle, Texas- Firp startingi
About 3 o'clock Thursday morning'
j caused a loss of $13,440 when the
flames consumed a huge barn, con*
I taining among other things fourteen
head of live stock and a large quan-
tity of feed, on the J. T. Shannon
farm, one-half mile north of Waxa-i
j hachie. Mr. Shannon carried only1
$1,500 In insurance, with $1,000 oa the
barn and $5-00 on the feedstuffs.
Articles destroyed were: twonty-
J five tons of ha.v, 750 bushels of corn,
j 650 bushels of oats, four head of fine'
| mules, ten head of hogs, two thresh-
ing machines and two engines, ten
sets of harness.
TO seal
in the
Burley
China Rejects Japan's Proposals.
Pekin.— The text of China's reply to
the proposals of the Japanese Govern-
ment concerning a settlement of the
Shantung controversy is made public
It declares that Japan has advanced
no p an for a settlement which is fun-
dauu nt.il'y acceptable to the Chinese
Government and people and that thai
Chinese Government feels that there
1b much in the new proposals "still'
Incompatible with the Chinese Govern-
ment's repeated declarations, the
Chinese people's hopes and aspira-
tions and the principles laid down In
Chinese treaties with foreign powers."
Intruders C'lp Girl's Hair.
Carrollton, Texas.—Two or three
Intruders, gaining entrance through a
window from which they cut the
screen, entered the room of 13-year-
old Tieatrice Gravely, gagged and held
her, and cut her beautiful locks from
her head with a knife The hair was
found later near the window through
which the intruders onlered. Miss
Gravely was unable to Identify any of
the men because of the darkness.
Dallas Pastor Is Named Moderator.
• 35sau«0ia®B!«iRa Baataafla ssekhhis
Taxable values In Dallas County fof
1921 show an Increase of moie than
$20,000,000 over the total for 11120.
The attendance last week on the
first day of the Titus County fair at
Mt. Pleasant was estimated at 12,001)
people.
The first carload of sweet potatoes
has been shipped from Caithage this
season, the price being 90 cents per
bituhel f. o. b. Caithage.
Mrs. Elois Cloeman Oak Cliff, wa«
almost instantly killed last week when
struck by an east bound street car at
Clinton and Jefferson streets.
With the return to work of some
Jix to seven hundred Santa Ke rail-
way employes, much of the unemploy-
ment question of Cleburne has been
solved.
The six buildings of the Howe Grain
ind Elevator Company, with their en-
tire contens of corn and oats at
Howe were totally destroyed by liru
last week.
Members of the City Council of
VVortham at a meeting last week de-
cided to hold an immediate election
for the purpose of voting $(i0,000 worth
of waterworks bonds.
The farmers in the Plainview com-
munity are plowing up all their ol.l
cotton stalks and other de id vegeta-
tion on their farms and burning it ia
'heir fight against bo.l weevil.
More than 1,000 Dallas homes have
been thrown open to State Fair vis-
itors from Get 8 to 23. and the hous-
ing problem in connection wiui 'the
fair has been solved, it is declared.
A thorough investigation of the af-
fairs connected with the State Juve-
nile Training School at Gatesvil'e has
started. Testimoney gs to the con-
duct of the institution is being taken
before Justice of the Peace J. ft
Brown.
Vernon's Retail Merchants' Associa-
tion was made into a permanent or-
ganization last week-end and by-laws
were adopted R. B. Sherrill was
elected secretary. Other officers are
"W. A. Lane, president, and Cy Dong
vice president.
Bankers stockmen and business
men have been asked by Marion San-
Bora, head of the war finance corpor-
ation's loan agency ill the Southwest,
to meet in Fort Worth, to organize a
company to handle the overflow loan
to farmers and ranchmen.
All parts of Texas from which re-
[ ports of inspectors of the Texas and
j Southwestern Cattle Rah1?rs' Asso-
ciation have been received this week
report excellent ranees and live stock
is in good shape, with the exception
of the San Angelo territory, where the
-ange is reported dry.
Contributions to missions. Chtistian
education and benevolences from 37
of the 41 Baptist churches in Dallas
County amounted to a total of $229,-
102.35 during the year ending Sept.
1, according to repoits made at the
nineteenth annual session of the Mis-
sionary Baptist Association.
Another chapter was added to the
j histo' v of the Kit Klux Klan in Texas
, when Louis Crow, a Waco business
! man and president of the Waco Ad-
vertisers' League, died Wednesday
morning. Crow's death was the re-
sult of knife wounds received m the
battle that took place at Lorena.
One man was seriously injured and
a number of others received minor
bruises when five cars loaded with
logs broke loose from a train on
Dowegan Hill, on the A. & N. R. Rail-
road, and crashed into the rear end
of a passenger coach on a T. & N. O.
train bound for Beaumont, from Dul>
las.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Bryan and little
son are taking ^lu? Pasteur serum
treatment after having been bitten
by a skunk a few days ago. The ani-
mal attacked the child while n jilay
in the yard. The skunk's head was
sent to Austin and found to be infect-
ed with rabies. The Bryan family
lives about six mi'.es southeast of
Denton.
About $200, all the money in the
vault of tlio First State Bank at Slidel,
a small town in Wise County, was se-
cured last week by burglars who
picked a hole in the brick wall of
the vault.
Gainesville Klan N'o. 151, Knights
of the Ku Klux, sent $50 in cuirency
to a local newspaper with the request
that it be delivered to Mrs. E. W.
Holiey, widow of an ex-soldier who
died last week in destitute circum.
stances.
During the month of September th«
Houston Federal Land Bank loaned
$820,000 and the amount would have
been much larger except fo rthe de-
lay in final execution of papers by
the borrowers.
J. B. Cable Jr., a traveling salesman
With headquarters at Waco, was held
up last week about five miles north
of Waca by two negroes. One held
a gun on him while the other went
through his pockets and searched hla
car.
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
SundaySchool
f LessonT
By IiKV. P. li. FlTZWATfcH. D. I>,
Teacher of English Uible In the Moody
Bible institute of Chicago.)
((£), 1921, Western Newspaper Union.)
LESSON FOR OCTOBER 16
WRIGLEYS
PAUL WRITES TO THE CHRIS-
TIANS AT COR I NT M.
I.RBSON TEXT-I Cor. 1:10, 11; 13:1-13.
GOl.DEN TKXT — And now sibid ;th
faith, hope, charily, these three, hut the
greatest of these Is charity.—I Cor. IS.
REFERENCE MATERIAL — John II:
84, 3S; Rom. 12:9-10.
PRIMARY' TOPIC—IIow to Show Our
Love.
JUNIOR TOPIC—What Love Does.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC
—A Letter to the church at Corinth.
YOIJNQ PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
—Some Problems of an Early Church.
1. Party Spirit in the Corinthian
Church (1 :10, 11).
In this church rival factions were
contending against each other. Some
wore for Paul, some for Apollos. son:** j
for l'eter, and some for Christ. 1 he
cause of this condition was failure ,
to see that the membership composin;* J
liis body cannot be divided. By one ,
Spirit all were baptized into the one.
body (12:13).
II. Love the More Excellent Way j
(I Cor! i:i:i-lH).
All of the Spirit's gifts are good,
but the most valuable of all is love.
Not all can preach or interpret
tongues, 1 >ut all call have the gift of
love. Love in this chapter is the
more excellent way of chapter 1 — :.S 1.
(1) The Pre-eminence of Love (vv.
i-:i). It transcends (1) speaking with
tongues. For men to possess the lofti-
est eloquence and be lacking in love
is to he as booming brass and clank
Ing cymbal. To be able to -i ■ k
pleasingly and powerfully is desirable
but to love is better.
('-') The gift of prophecy—the nbilltv ^
to unfold mysteries. To be nble to
penetrate the mysteries of nature and
providence is good, but to love is bel-
ter.
(.'!) Faith of the most vigorous kind,
| even such as to remove mountains, is
; of less value than love.
(-1) Philanthropy of the most gener-
i ous sort, causing one to surrender
till earthly goods for Ibe sake of th'j
poor is praiseworthy, hut unless actu-
ated by love is valueless before God.
(.I) Heroic devotion which leads to
martyrdom is profitless unless backed
t by love.
2. The Attributes of Love (vv. 4-7).
(1) It is long-suffering and kind, it
means not only to bear long, but to be
| kind all the while. It is much easier
i to bear long than It is to be kind all
i the while.
(2) It is free from envy. Those
! who love are entirely free from the
spirit engendered because of the su-
i perior worth and success of others,
j (.*{) It is free from boasting and
vanity. Love strives to do good to all
and is not careful to seek their admira-
[ tion and applause.
(4) It Is decorous. Love is always
j polite and mannerly; knows how to be-
I have at all times.
I (5) It is unselfish. It is always
j seeking the good of others and is for-
j get fill of self.
(d) It does not give way to passion.
! It does not allow itself to he aroused
in resentment. It is not quick tem-
pered.
(7) It takes no delight in evil; does
not impute evil motives to others; Is
not suspicious. It is forgiving. Love !
has no sympathy with that which is
evil, but sympathizes with that which j
Is true; has a common joy with it. |
(8) It beareth all things. It wraps j
Itself in the gracious mantle of love
and shuts all evil out.
(0) Lwe is trustful; It looks into
the futuie with confidence.
(10) Love is hoiieful; it seizes the
things of the future and brings them
into the present, appropriating them
for Its use.
<11) Love is firm. It is free from
vacillation. It intelligently sets Itn
attention to things that are right and 1
with unvarying strength holds fast.
3. The Permanence of Love (vv. 8-
13). (1) Jt outlasts prophecy. Proph-
ecy in the Scriptures means both a
f&reU'tilng of events and the teaching
of the Word of God. Prophecy as pre-
diction shall be fulfilled; prophecy as
teaching shall he brought to an end in
that day when teaching is not needed
(Heb. 8 :11 ; .Tor. 3t :34).
(2) it outlasts speaking with
tongues. The race once spoke Ibe
same limgiinge, hut as a judgment for
sin Mid rebellion God brought confu-
sion and caused the people to speak
many tongues. The day is coming
when the redemption wrought by ,Te-
sus Christ shall have been accom-
plished in all its fullness; all nations
shall bo brought hack to one tongue.
(3) It outlasts knowledge. The
Knowledge we now have is only rela-
tive, hut the day is coming when this
relative knowledge shall lie done away
by the coming in of a wider and nobler
Intelligence; the twilight shall tie lost
in maturity, for at Christ's coming we
shall see Him face to face and shall
be like Him. Love will always abide
for God is love.
AFTER
EVERY
MEAL
WRIGLEYS
Newest
Creation
,
9
A delicious
peppermint
flavored sugar
jacket around pep-
permint flavored chew-
ing gum.
Will aid your appetite
and digestion, poiish
your teeth and moisten
your throat.
watoiEY5w .wmwuix
.WR5GLFY5.
The Flavor Lasts
GREW WHISKERS TO GET JOB CARRIED SECRET TO GRAVE
And Secretary of State Hughes Has
Worn the Required Facial Adorn-
ments Ever Since.
Charles E. Hughes, secretary of
state, gave little Indication to his
teachers and classmates at Brown uni-
versity that he was to become a leader
in the nation, though it is true that he
had his bachelor degree before he
was twenty-one. He planned to make
teaching bis life work, and He did
devote some years to that occupation.
His first application for a job was as
a teacher of Greek in a small Eastern
college. The bead of the department
received liiin kindly, but evidently re-
garded his youthful appearance as
making him an Impossibility in that
line.
"Why," said he, "you have no more
hair on your face than an egg."
"If a beard is necessary I can raise
one," said Hughes, who '••new his own
ability in that line, and soon was able
to qualify for the job and got it. And,
by the way, lie has the same whiskers
yet. lie has never worn a clean-
shaved face since.—Columbus Dis-
patch.
A stainless steel has been invented
In England.
Canadian Prospector Refused to
Divulge Location Where Gold
Cropped Out.
A man who kept his secret to the
end was the Canadian hunter Gilbert-
son. Sixty years ago, when he whs
making a canoe trip up the Wapshe
river, the New York Evening Post
stales, lie struck eamp for the night
near what later discoveries indicate
must have been a large body of gold-
bearing ore. Without knowing what
this ornamental stone was lie took
home a big piece to use for a door
weight. A while after this a geolo-
gist who was visiting Gilbertson identi-
fied the oii', and a rush to stake
claims along the Wapshe ensued. But
the unwitting prospector would never
tell where he made bis great find. In
later years be became insane and died,
still refusing to reveal the location.
This season a systematic search of
that country is being made in hope
of rediscovering "the Giibertson lode."
A Suggestion.
Mrs. Scrapp— I've talked and talkt<J
to you until I am worn to a frazzle.
Scrapp—Well, why not shut up foi
repairs?—Boston Transcript.
The call of a katydid can be heard
for a quarter of a mile.
The Chinese and Japanese In theli
lables regard the Milky Way as a
stream containing silvery fishes.
from
Wichita Falls, Texas.—The election
of l)r. Glen L. Sneed, pastor of the
Trinity Presbyterian Church, Dallas,
as moderator, for the coming year and
an address by the Rev. W. B Pres-
ton of Teague, retiring moderator
featured the opening meeting of the
annual Texas Presbyte:tan synod in
session in this city. The meeting held
in the F1r t Presbyterian Church wai
•Utendedby synod delegates from all
parte of the State and by several high
official*
Once you ve
enjoyed the
toasted flavor
you will al
ways want it
j)Is jLl.lmm
Krnni the Atlantic coast to the Mis
ulsslppi river on paved roads' Tb
•nay sound like a tno'or st's dream,
'mt It will be actually possible to make
such a trip this fall T'.ir 'n -t st-eteh
of tb" national pike In Illinois will be
completed then. Never befor- has
such a lone paved road been possible
in this country.
The Man Who Said:
The proof of the pudding
is in the eating"—
was only half through
He started a Rood pudding-
proof, but he didn't finish it.
There's a lot of trouble in
the world from puddings that
taste good but don't do good.
They "eat" well, but that
ends the recommendation.
Sanitariums are full of pud-
ding-eaters who stopped the test at
tasteand forgot to inquire whether
their food gave the body what it
needed—until the body rebelled.
Grape-Nuts is a food that
tastes good and does good. The
proof of Grape-Nuts begins in the
eating and goes on through the
splendid service which Grape-
Nuts renders as a real food.
Grape-Nuts is the perfected good-
ness of wheat and malted barley
■—dclicious to taste, easy to di-
gest, and exceptionally rich in
nourishment for body and brain.
'There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts
f i
I
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Martin, W. L. The Rusk Cherokeean (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, October 14, 1921, newspaper, October 14, 1921; Rusk, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth291223/m1/3/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Singletary Memorial Library.