Daily Ardmoreite (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 11, 1920 Page: 4 of 10
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THURSDAY NOVEMBER 11 1920.
PAGE FOUR
THE DAILY AKDMOKE1T13
THE DAILY ARDMOREITE .
Daily Ardmoreite
' Ardracrt Gkluloma
John P. EasWy Editor and General
Manager.
Ooige H. Wyatt Managing Editor
idxh. F.mniitt T. Reid City Eilitor
Af.ernrons (Except Saturday)
Sunday Morning
und
Full Leased Associated Press Wire.
F.atertd ut ArJmore. Okla. FoatofXice
as Second Class M:ul
TKI.EPHO.NES
Zr W
Ciij Editor ... 53S
SiC.etv Htlr.or
tUSINi.SS I'HONKS
' C.n u.a'.icn 29
i'.viti Office . 5
Advertising Department
iMEMB.ir.P. ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively
tuitule.l tc ths.' use for rt'-putjlicauun of
kit t.es dispatches credited to or not
otherwise credited in :U puter and
eio the loi.al news published Herein.
THl'RsDVY. NOVEMDEK U.
grathe of our Njliuii aiid lh"
sanctity of our Nation'" ii.-tituitwiis.
And. believing ihus let us. we be-
seei h you. pause today in your irud
flight through lit.' pause long enough
to drop the tear of heartfelt grit f
and real gratitude to the memory
ot those who save their lives that
the Democracy of a woild might
become established. l.i t us pause
with uncovered heads to breathe a
prayer for the mothers of the brave
hoys of America who sleep today
their eyelids closed In that endless
sWp which knows no earthly waking
a prayer for the well-being of those
r.nble American women who gave
their sons flesh of their flesh blood
of their blood to the same cause
for which th.ir forefathers fought
and died the cause of Ubn ty and for
the emancipation of mankind from
the slavery of Despotism.
And. pausing l-t us ih.uik 1.kI
that those m-n who died along the
"WeMern Front" in a foreign land
far away from the homes wherein
'they wire born and reared died for
the holiest and most sacred cause
for which man may die.
Let us honor those dead and Bone
sons of America let us honor their
u.fcei. iii iljinmy ..i.J tUKby lUojp
how lite -in.lt chilli infcii i.ai
callus of ;;ood humor are smiles of
tin. lips alone in which the eyes
l.ave tiu par how the expression
which pi-rmeatts tn bankers features
ae of the brand known as "poker
face." how you are made to feel that
you are honored in rerinUiiny the
lanker to handle your deposits and
diaw down interes. in your coin.
Without lUlemplinr to en'.er into
tilt; merits or the u merits of the
arguments udvanced by State Press
v.i can but confess (hat lie is more
(i less right in hii stsuniption that
:ln; aveiM'e banker liluy be a little
loc "conservative" ir. the manner in
w hich he Welcomes vour visits to the
institution over which he presides
and in which yoti deposit the fruits
of the sweat of your brow and the
skill of your hands.
We ale prone though we may be
to confess it compelled to acknowl
edge that Sale Press is right in
both the abstract and the concrete
when he likens the banker to the j
terrapin which draws his head in his j
I shell at the approach of an imagined
danger there to keep it until he is
surrounded by his own silence ulone.
Editorial
of the Day
A lHOlUUT Hili THE DAY
On tatuj s euinu; camping' ground
Their ?int nt ere spread
While glory guaidi with noiseless
round
The bivouac of llie dead.
LET IS HONOR TUE.M
memories while an eiiobllng pride) Kvh-.v man who calls upon Hie
mingles with our sorrowings-a pride j bunker does not want to borrow
in the knowledge that they were our money and every man who wants to
sons and brothers that they were of borrow money is not a deadbeal. any
that noble American stock that stock j more than did every man who called
whose men never knew defeat whose upon the bartender in days gone
women were ever ready with Spartan-like
loyalty to country's weal
by want to
i drunk want
get drunk and getting
to stand the house up
to
Today is a day of holiness ot .
fucredness a day to be held in the
deepest and inosi sincere reverence
and tespect by every true-hearted
.1... t.. l.u l.t.1.1 iVf lin- I
MUri llUI U tt. W itvitt .v.
oorn decades as the day upon which Roving
the infant. Freedom was born and I
christened in ihe blood of thousands
Cf America's young manhood. j
Across ihe waste of waters which j
turge and roll' between me snores
Cf the Land of Liberty and ihe
eoasi lines of the Eastern World
the people of France of England.
. Italy and Celgiuin stand today witn
bared heads as they humbly give
thanks to the Good Clod tor their
deliverance from the bonds of Mon-
archy's rule and remember with
prayerful hearts the sons from the
Western World who laid down their
to give their man children
erty's shining cause.
Let us honor the noble dead the
dead whose deathless deeds of valor
shall live forever and all time bright
shining as the myriad stars which
bejewel the canopy's of heaven's bend-
ing blue.
Let us honor the dead the noble
dead who fell that Christianity and
Humanity and the supremacy of the
one and living God mijfht rule with
gentleness over a world of
eace.
Lit us honor the dead the heroic
Idead with an honor which may be
made akin to the deathless Love
J which prompted the Savior of Man
'the Child of Bethlehem to give his
that mankind might be saved
Lib-1 ft"' expense.
The glad hand the pleasant smile
the cherry' voice of greeting goes
far in business Ik the man who em-
ploys these commodities ot good fel-
lowship a bartender a dry goods
dealer a restaurunleur or u banker.
This is Armistice Day
which you drop a 'tear
memory of America's
the day upon
of love to the
noble dead.
On this day there should be no
entertainment of political divergencies
of opinion no bias of religious be-
liefs. We are all Americans.
hie
lives who 'made the supreme saeri-
ficefc who gave their heart's red blood
that a Universal Freedom might be
- born to the children of the world.
. Aud tven u.i worship the children of
Europe so lately King-ridden at the
shrine of Liberty today so worship
the ptople of America the people of
.he. fulled Statts at the same hon-
ored and spotlessly pure shriue thai
shtine around which all devotees oi
"Honor gather thul ishriiie which has
been baptised in the blood of count-
less millions who have died even as
0d the Savior of man hat Despot-
ism might be banisiu-J from the
land ihat Civilization might spread
lis enobling mantle over the natious
cf the euiih that Humanity that
CoJ-;;tveft attribute might actuate
UtiiliUP'llpled the hearts of the my-
riad members of the human family
to deeds of kindness and of love
to acts of nobleness and of real
irilie. while the white-winged Angel
of Peace unfurls her fair pillions and
chan.s from now until the Judgment
E-jy that solemn and Chris'.-inspired
requiem "On Earth Peace; toward i
"ilm. Oood-will."
The Prtsidt-iu of the United Slates
the Governor of Oklahoma the Mayor J
more and the mandates of the :
Christian heart join in asking that '
ou. each and every one man. wo-
man and child pause today in the
pursuit of your usual avocations i
pauxe for one short minute for one ;
itiflnliislmal span of lime and with
bared heads and honest hearts breathe 1
ft prayer to the Most Omnipotent a
prayer for ihe rest of the souls of
those brave boys who have passed
inio Eternity wi h a prayer that
Wjr and rapine and bloodshed may
: " tenceforih be banished from the
pathways trod by children of a Chris-
aii World.
has been Said that the Allied-
we a forgttful people that
arv a people whose patriotism
Uormantlly until awakened by
ovi 1 1 ut'; uKam.-i i ountry und
from an eternal death.
Let us honor the dead the Amerl- :
can dead the sons of the men who
crossed the storm-tossed waters of '
the Atlantic and carved the greatest '
nation known to history from the 1
wilderness of Chaos. Let us honor
them as the sons of the men who
underwent untold and unthinkable 1
hardships that this might become Hie I
"Land of the Free and the Home of
the Brave." Let us honor them as
the sons of the men who. three i
quarters of a century ago died tha' I
this Union might live. Let us honor j
them aa the sons of the men who i
donned Ihe Confederate grey and '
! gave their lives for the Cause which
I they thought holy just and upright.
Let us honor them as the sons who
died and dying made this at last a
i reunited country a country with' one
nag anil one uou wno washed away
with their blood all stains of fac-
tional strife which outlived the fra-
tricidal war of the sixties that war
wherein the hand of father was raised
against son that war wherein brother
was arrayed against brother.
Let us honor the dead our dead
loving their memories with a love
Vhich passe! h understanding.
Let us honor them with tears and
love; let us honor them with love
and tears.
Let us honor them with sincerity
which may cause them to know look-
ing down from their places in high
heaven that though their bodies are
mouldering and returning to the earth
from which they sprung lying be-
neath the dew-kissed flowers of
France beneath the "popples of Flan-
ders Field their memories live bright.
unsullied ami undying deep enshrined
In every American heart.
The young lady across the way
says she has three stars on her
flag one for the fellow she mieht
have had she thought she had and
one for the fellow she should have had.
We are today abovtt all else Am-
ericans. We are not protestants or
papists Democrats or Republicans
bui fathers and brothers mothers
and sisters of the American dead and
the American living of the American
Legion.
Today perhaps more especially than
any other day of the year the un-
American man or woman has no
place in the hearts and homes of
the American people. Do not let it
be said that American patriotism
died when the armistice was signed.
I Oklahoma Sicafts
i
Muskogee Times-Democrat belives
that soon the "hat in the ring" will
give way to the old fashioned bounet.
Duncan Banner states that the
also rans are busy telling everyone
how it happened that none of them
ran better.
Ada News says that he is suf-
ficiently patriotic to assume that the
country will be fully able to wobble
and wiggle along for ihe next four
years.
Oklahoman neenis to know a lot
about women and their wiles. He
says "A woman's first kiss Is a sac-
rament her second is an udventure
her third a surrender her fourth an
experiment und all the rest merely
research.
"On Fame's eternal camping ground! Durant Democrat alleges that the
; Their silent tents are spread young man who used to buy a box
i While Glory guards with noiseless
round
The bivouac
of the dead."
I;
cans
they
lie
acme
Country' Flag: that this awakening
last during the stressful moments
only to pass tu lapse as soon as the
5lllomelit passes into forg'-tf ulliess of
all things that to to rnaku this the
country wherein the lirst real Fri-e-
..itim was born whtnin i.ibertv was;
rocked in the cradle of Humanity
f. ' Unfortunately the charge H mure
cr les well-found"d. but we uie glad
overdrawn. Let us rather
that we tile a cureless peo-
peupie Who fail to realize the
THERE'S A DIFFERENCE
Slate Press in Dallas News mourns
and refuses comforting because the
! bankers of today are not the genial
'Joke-loving happy-hand bunch which.
In the muin ;onstltuted the personnel
of the bartenders of yesterday.
Retrospectively State Press speaks
of the manner in which Tom and
Jerry would greet you as you entered
heir places of business giving you
mile for smile Joke for joke laugh
for laugh handclasp of good fellow-
hip for handtlasp.
And then be draw.: the picture of
tlm wall of cold reseive which the
banker builds about himself the mo-
of blackening spit in it and shine
his own shoes is now found down at
the corner doing hi.s bit toward
making some Imported American from
the land of the Acropolis rich.
Wanette News haa evidently been
stuck In the mud with his flivver
lie says "Fifty Real's ago when tlus
country was poor there was some
excuse for bad roads; today with the
country rich no excuse for bad
roads can possibly be found."
to aay
iliev.
tl a
t.ieiit you gain the si.nctuary of Iiuj
I'ler and private oliice pointing out
the manner in which your hand la
Miami News wants to know when
the barber will heur about the re-
ductions in prices of all commodities
including shaves hair cuts massages
shampoos neck-shaves conversation
and other things furnished In
line of business
1 FlVWTINt; COTTON EXPORTS
I Prom Dallas News)
' The organization of the federal
toreign fiuance corporation at New
Orleans Is a promise of relief to the
beleaguered cotton growers. How
! much relief may be expected as a
' result of this action and how soon
j are questions to which probably no
i one w ould venture an answer. The
'capital stock of the corporation wh.ch
j has been fixed at Jti.UOii 00 J has yet
to be subscribed. Tu get it .subscribed
j to do the oilier work of . organization
j and then to put iis machinery into
motion will obviously require no
j little tune. Willi respect to the qlian-
; tity of relief w nich may he expected
from its operation it is pertinent
I tu say that the debentures it may
oiler for sale under the F.dge Act
authorizing its creation are limited
i in amount to ten times the amount
of its capital stock and it is irom
the sale of these debentures that
money is to be got for paying lor
cotton und such other commodities
as the corporation may undertake
to finance lor export. The quantity
of cotton which may be moved with
JtiU.000.000 is only a small part of
that which is clamoring for a mar-
ket. However if in the relative sense
no very great relief is lo be expected
as a result of this single action and
even that not very soon it is to be
commended as u definite beginning
in the right direction. The price
of cotton is low. the market almost
comatose chiefly because European
countries whose normal require-
manlu itefufa t htt war absorbed almost
half of our crop have left no assets
in forms which b yordinary finan-
cial operations can be converted in-
to buying media. The Edge Act cre-
ates a method designed to i liable
the liquidation of such assets assets
of the kind not convertible into cur-
rent funds by ordinary banking pro-
cesses. It Is this method which the
federal foreign finance corporation
organized at New Orleans is to put
Into operation. European establish-
ments wishing lo buy cotton or any
other commodity which the corpo-
ration decides to finance will offer
to pledge to Ihe Corporation silcii
assets or indorsements as they may
possess the forms of security being
described by ihe law. The corpo-
ration's advances on tnese will be
made immediately out of it u own
capital. But to replenish irs capital
and to enable it to expand Its oper-
ations it is authorized to sell iis
own debentures secured first by
whatever securities it accepts from
foreign buyers and then by its own
capital. The total of the debentures
which it is allowed to have out-
standing is limited as has been said
to ten limes the amount of its capi-
tal. The experimental nature of the ef-
fort is apparent. The success of it
will be contingent on the ability of
European establishments lo offer ac-
ceptable security in large amounts
and then on the ability of the finance
corporation to find a market for its
own debentures in this country; for
the money necessary to be got. if
our cotton Is to be moved from our
farms and warehouses to the mills
of Europe must come from our own
accumulations. The first of these
continnoncies is probably the less
doubtful one. It is reasonable to
suppose that the im n who have or-
ganized this forfifcii f. nance corpo-
ration satisfied themselves before do-
ing so that in the ways the Edge
Act prescribes Europeans are in a
position to secure the purchase of
large quantities of cotton. .If this
is so. it should seem that the only
questions Is as lo the extent thai the
securities indorsed by the finance
corporation in effect may he ex-
changed for cash among investors in
this country. It is in this direc-
tion thut we shall probably encoun-
ter the- limitation on the success
of this effort to move our cotton and
so revive the Industry upon which
the welfare of the south is so large-
ly dependent.
That any very perceptible effect
will soon follow the organization of
the federal foreign finance corpo-
ration is hardly lo lie expected as
has been said. But If Us effort should
be rewarded with u reasonable de-
gree of success we may confidently
count on the organization of other
such corporations and so hope that
eventually Europe will bo enabled
to buy all of the Immense quantity
of cotton that It needs and will
continue to need.
This prospect may not be highly
comforting to those who are suffer-
ing from the grip of the existing
situation. To them it offers little if
any Immediate relief. Put to tliein
tl lliluU fl rrr t lie liromlse that a sit-
l uation which Inflicts so gr
have a long lite of u :.r:uliirsv li is
liictrcJ. ui.i tl.c uci thai i.r-
ganlration of this corporation Is so
much uii anticipation of future needs
that the only adverse criticism of an
action whic.li in all other respects
is so highly commendable can be
founded; for it prompts the thought
that what has just now been done
ought to have been done many months
ago. However to urge thaf criticism
would be as ungenerous petty. The
outstanding fan is that a few of the
south's best bankers have done some
thing which reserves the approval
I of all of Its people and the substan
tial support of all those of them
who are able to give it. without which
indeed the south will noi derive the
Immense' benefit latent in their action.
CAPTURED IN THE HILLS
Of COMANCHE
LOOSEN UP THAT
HEAVY COLD
Go after it right away with
Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-IIoney
The Anlmorei'fc's
HOME FORUM
101 K 1.0N(i EAltS
Ktiilor of The Ardmoreite:
Alter hearing the returns from
election last Tuesday evening; I
somewhat uneasy. I felt that
thief might slip in any minute
you know not the hour. To
myself safety 1 got my trap
llie
felt
the
for
Assure
bailee
Indianhoma okla. Nov. 11. Barney
Ballou and L. L. Barney who Com-
anche couniy officers say have con-
fessed to the attempted robbery of
the First State Bank here Tuesday
which was followed by an exciting
chase over Comanche county hills
and resulted in the wounding of
Merle Conner of Cache one ot the
pursuers were 'captured this morning
in the Wichita mountains 10 miles
from here.
George Kallifleisch. cashier of the
bank today idi ntified the men as
being the alleged outlaws.
The capture was effected after!
Frank Rush a government forester.
had informed members of the pos ie j
which was trailing the men that ho
had seen two men last night traveling i
a seldom used mountain road in a ;
j covered wagon. Taking up the trail j
of the wagon the posse soon rani
down the alleged would-be robbers.
The men are beiny; held in the :
Comanche county Jail.
Ht person
I nationally
and put it out to avalf the coining i
of llie thief should he arrive. j
Arisine; early on the morning of j
the third. I found "Mr. Thief" in the
trap. He was black with while
stripes upon his back. His long' pearly I
teeth and his bright eyes made hiui
a rather cunning little creature.
I stayed a good distance from him
therefore I could not tell whether
he. was a "Texas Lily White or a
"Hlnck nod Tan."
t sent a rush call to The Ardmore
ite for a paper and what do you
think 1 found it to be? That (Repub-
lican Polecat I that ale up the Demo-
cratic Rooster.
Ilemou'ats. if there are any here
had better keep your eyes open and
traps set. for ve know not the min
ute or hour when the thief may ur-
rive.
Four long years lo watch and wait
Four long- years the traps to bait;
But ve hope with these next four
Will end the fkunks for evermore.
Give the Democrats the seat
And give the Republicans defeat
i Then sweet rest we Will lei eive
1 honestly and truly do believe.
No more silting up so late
No more dadburn traps to bait;
May it stay away forever.
And come back never no never.
Muskogee. Robert W. Blakely con-
fessed slayer of his 16-year old step-
daughter. Effle May A 1 ford was sen-
tenced to die in the plectrlc chair
afier 15 minutes deliberation by a
ury In district court here.
who' once gives thi
popular cough and
cold relieving medicine a fair
opportunity of proving itself become
a convert. He learniTiow really bene-
hcial in healing and balsamic antisep-
tics are in helping relieve a cold cough
grippe bronchitis hoarseness tit finds
out how promptly it assists Nature in
Hecting a complete eradication- of
phlegm and inb animation aod con-
gestion. Today right now get an econom-
ical bottle at your druggUt's. It will
be a well-paying investment. Keep it
on hand as a safeguard against cold)
JOc 00c JliO.
BrJoli's
Pine-farHone
far Coudhsn:
- ii. O iin nil mi
Ut. Huboo fcczvui Ointment
used ir ly relieve tha torturing
ttkia-iicti heals the didtijr ured erup-
tion. Ooud fur parpiy iticvg ftcu
ana other -ikia troubles.
Dr.Hobson's
Eczema Ointment
ill Ardmoreite Want Ads.
1 would not be a Pol
Hut me and mine for
Rooster.
L'at booster
the Democratic
CARTER I'OCNTV VOTER.
Read Ardmoreite AVant Ads.
True Kmvm iKSEcrrciper
K Kills whiter insect I
H pe''l u O T a S. B
XX k roachea. water K
. VrXvVfj bugs aula and bed I
VV VVviQ ''"K3- Simple el- 3
i W'Til fective c h e a p. in
.vJiti-v N o n - p o isonoua. H
Doused liofstra I
K guns lac; pkgs. 20c 1
D .Cucl.-0 druggists j
gifry SM and grocer. i
S L HOFSTRA 3
tffll litest -ii! a$Sl
Yet aw Buda'et Plan I
bring it ffey Christmas'
Come in right away and ask about it.
We'll show you how to put your 1921
dollars to work now. The ideal way to
provide for that finest Christmas gift
VJhi Phonograph with a
There is no inflation in Edison Prices.
"Edison stood the gaff" to keep his
favorite invention within the reach of
everyone.
The Phonograph Shop Inc.
214 W. Main Phone 1G91
Hugo News tiiiii'kM that many u poor
Republican politician will he found
without a postofrice Just becuUHe his
wife wants the Job. addiliK that the
woman vote Is an mihriowii quantity
which must be catered lo and Halved
wlih better things than otficos of
'he fourth claiK.
Mm
m
XtU U 1
TKe World loosened up its
corn belt when
Post Toasties
lU WtJ.N-l. SI
lcLUit; uxi uiu j i icu rvt; lq dilfll.
soys io"" u
MKIIICi.W MIXING (OMMIS.
SION M ltE ON B.WJY RATTLES
LftiiHinir Mich. Nov. 11. Infant's
rultli'N are henceforth to be claused j
os athletic apparatus by the Mlchl-
j (an Htat" boxing coiniiiiHMon. Tom
j Pilfers Ihe i oniiiiiKHion' chairman
'. hu decided when application for u
t ' bale of baby rallies" wum made b'
j Superlntetndent MontHoiiiei y of the
I slate Ki hool for 01 plums and aban-
doned children at Coldwater.
Among thn commiKHlon'K tlutieH Ik
I Ihe distribution unions; m hooln of
1 ulhli tii rood ptirchnned with a fund
drawn lr"n boxing bouts in the slate
The i water requisition was the
tiritt to ni hide athletic equipment
'for sut h yuunx u'hletlcs but HlKKr
was quick to decide that rattles could
b so clasFed. The state's ward of
it.'oldwater range in ugu from svrul
months to 14 years.
i
j V.it ArJmcreii want ads fuittulck
rttu'u.
at u hard-
thelr ghip 0ll them will be remedied in
the quickest way that now neenis pos-
sible and that that tdtuntiun will
nut recur. For it Is lo be remembered
that It will be u lotilf time More
Europe recuperates moUfih econo-
mically to make the pre-war methods
Of financiliR its purchases serve either
ltd needs or ihn.se of our own cot-
ton Industry. Assuming it Hiiccesstul
the federal foreign finance corporation
and others which Us success may
o
-s
H
H
H
I
be expected to give rise to. will
o
J. C. PENNEY COMPANY A NATION-WIDE INSTITUTION
Suits For That Red-Bloodecl
Y oungster of Yours
Hard playinjr happy youngsters these American lads of ours and it taken clothes
ji real quality lo last them. At Penney's you will find just such jjarmenta in
all wool and wool mixture materials that will stand the hard usage boyi accord
their clothes.
Boys' Knickerbocker Suits
Extra long wear is what mother looks for when she buys son's suit. This is what
she will find in our Penney Junior and Armor Clad suits.
All Wool Clothes
Give Service of 2 Suits From 1.
COAT HAS Doubly elbows double sewn work bar tacked pockets hand sewn
buttons reinforced at arm holes over-raised shoulders Mohair Alpaca body lin-
ing sateen .sleeve lining especially set-in-to-fit collar reinforced button holes
basted front.
KNICKERS HAVE Double knees (seam to seam) double seat( seam to seam)
double sewn work fine quality of inter lining reinforced buttonholes strongly
sewed-in buttons adjustable straps at knees. $12.50 to 1514.75.
A good serviceable wool mixture suit belted back; a very stylish and service-
able suit for school wear. $9.00 lu $10.90.
Stop Your Cold
Ask your druHiit for
the handy 2M package
Pneunnla Grip end
Flu flee before
5 Y
N Kit v-sn
HI IH II II M Ul IB Mi b
m f it ui v au
cA tHation-ivicle Institution
t nhni rnn rvtT t
PENNEY COMPANYA NATION-WIDE INSTITUTION
K
ft
5?
O
M
H
H
o
mi iiir.ac
i'TB'iMWT
rr.ii Ti- t
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Easley, John F. Daily Ardmoreite (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 30, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 11, 1920, newspaper, November 11, 1920; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc158670/m1/4/: accessed May 14, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.