The Orange Daily Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 152, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 27, 1923 Page: 4 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
4 •'PS?!®'
HfflW-fP t« ■ MKI
f8|P^i ,■>«.,
£> .«'. \to-5:
pi
* ,M\
oon except Saturday and Sunday moraine «t M*
•I by the Orange Printing Company.
t|i* Orange, Texas, postoffice aa second-class matter
Member United Press Association.
Rates: In advance—one month, no cents; one year 96.
Advertising Representatives: KnlU-Burke, Inc., Brokanr Bldg.,
42nd and Broadway, New York City; 111 South Michigan Blvd.,
Chicago, 111.
erroneous reflection upon the character, standing or reputation of
person, firm or corporation which may appear in the columns of
Leader will be gladly corrected upon its being brought to the
attention of the publishers.
All Lk'paruneuta: No. 4 or 88.
Hi
mi
^ORANGE, iffifAS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1923.
*■ ' - ——
H 7
'■ j
cotton and cheap labor
Georgia is face to face with a labor crisis.
South
Since
>> --Carolina is lace to face with a labor crisis.
1920 228,93b negroes have migrated from Georgia to
; north. Labor shortage on the farms of Georgia
rijjjjfc estimated at 70,743 and 46,674 farm dwellings in
P the state have been left vacant. Within a year more
Jjl>$ian 70,000 negroes have migrated from South Carolina
•' to the worth and thousands of farms have been aban-
doned.
fe-iii':; v^efore the coming of the Civil war negro slave
I®.-labor produced the cotton crop of the south. Since
the passing ol slavery days cheap labor has produced
cotton crop of the south and largely the Jabor
of women and children. Drastic immigration laws
have shut out aliens from other countries, ihjs his
ted a heavy demand for labor in the industrial
iters of the north. Now they are tapping the negro
reservoirs of the south and the mexican reaer-
As the demand for labor grows greater in the
and the east the exodus of the negro from the
and the southeast will grow larger year by year.'
where will the south obtain the cheap labor to
cheap cotton lor the mills of New England and
England?
o
mmm
©S3$$
m
; '4'^ >%,
7j
)
tWANvene
^DLlTic^
,
PSI
iMKMMv* f/k.,. v y* .
■ -J
1
I
iiw
*x
EMH PniLPOTTS
HLO lT«AT3t>
„x ^2 y
ft.W. SATTE RT l CCD
. zy COPy« «HT till THt M'MMAN com
RtttAVt® «ywlASUWK*IHC.. ABMT.MST KIWiP. bW
Mich a* 1. boa base at Jenny Pen-
Max* from hla homo <m
Ha la last seen In tha
Bobort Rsdmarnt.
tho two man
betai
Pr
> to Jenny,
a new baa
Ins built by
r Quarry,
e flo
■Ml
two-gun hart\
M^Wild Bill Hart, the greatest two-gun man that the
pptures have ever known, has returned to the screen
as a Paramount star. He is to make four pictures a
r for five years as the heavy in a series of pro-
tions ol the type that made him famous. Wild Bill
been vindicated. A woman drove him from the
en. <■ She said he was the father of her son.
Wild Bill branded it as a lie, an infamous lie, and
jpthdrew from movieland.
This was a year ago. Then the woman repented,
admitted that she had lied, that she never had a
that she never knew Wild Bill Hart, but that she
a Hart lan and love of him drove her wild. And
age of miracles has returned. Why not the prison
stripes for the woman? This should be a fifty-
;y world. Woman has been given the ballot. She
been given all the rights that man enjoys. Now
ien she commits a crime why not give her a prison
and all the humiliation that goes with it?
o—
la found on the floor of the
cottage and wl?aeaa«a taatlfy to hav-
ing aeen Robert ride away-on his
motor bicycle with a heavy Back be-
hind the saddle. The aack la found
In • rabbit hole a far distance from
the scene of the anpposed murder.
MM* Brendan.
Investigator,
to Solva thr
to live With
one criminal
y lei
*
1 '
|
'i,
,
:v'\ - ■■■*
I . -: i '•$
within the law
Senator Charles Curtis, of Kansas, is a republican
sman and an American lawmaker. Kansas is a
leum producing state. Senator Curtis says de-
ion in the price of crude oil during the last three
ilths was primarily for the purpose of stock jobbing,
charges that certain stock jobbers have been sys-
atically planed in possession of advance informa-
regarding the reductions to be made in the prices
^crude and refined oil. Well, aren't they within the
? Stock rading is their business. Gambling is
r trade. King Petroleum has his favorites. If
a hot tip to give out why not whisper it in the
of those who are close to the throne? Business is
Bess and the wise ones attend to the picking^.
—o ■!'' ■■,' ■' v v
on their trail \ ' x
A former president of the New York Consolicffited
Exchange asserts that fraudulent promotions
cost the public more money than all the bi
«that ever existed, and that $$300,000,000 in frautlu-
l nstocks alone were distributed in the state m
last year. This former president of
stock exchange should visit Ft. Worth or
„,he will-find the federal cou
" the. Veildlifcts of'guilty,*j
ffe*-
_ by Jenny
at Bendigo'a
MP9« porta.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STOR1
fteSHtlgn Redmayne grunted.
"COme In and saa tha latter,*" ho
naid. 1 never thought you'd falL
i lt*a all very terrible indeed and I'm
• rtssnnsd tt t uude stand anything
■ ' about tt. Bat one fast fa door:
brother wrote this letter and he
wrote tt from Plymouth; and since
be hMot been reported from Ply-
mouth, I feel very Utile doubt tho
thteg he fronted to happen tea hap-
Then he tuned to hla nh
"*WaH laws a cup at taa In half
an hour. Jenny. Xsatisw rn take
Mr. Dissxlsa op to tht tower room
along with me."
Mrs. Pendsan dlaappeared Into the
hdusa and Mark followed
the aullor.
Thsar naaasd through a aquara hall
fall of various foreign carioeitlee
collected by the owner. Then they
hMiswdsd lain a large, octagonal
chamber, like tha lantern of a light-
house, which surmounted the dwell-
ing.
"My lookout." explained Mr. Rod
mayne. In foul weather I spend
an my time q> here and with yon
der strong, three-inch telescope 1
can pick up what's doing at Ma. A
bunk In the corner, you aee. I often
aleep op her*, too."
"You might almoat as well
afloat," pU BCfpdoa, and the re-
niaHk pleased Bendlgo
"That's how I feel; and I can tell
you there's a bit of movement, too.
sometimes. I never wish to see b!g<
ger water than beat these cliffs dur-
ing the south-eaater last March. We
ahook to our heat, X can tell you."
He went to a tall cupboard In
corner, unlocked It and brought out
a square, wooden desk of old-fash
toned pattern. This he opened hnd
produced * latter which he handed
to the detective.
Brandon sat down in a chair under
the open window and read this com-
munication afojptyV' The writing was
large and sprawling; it sloped Slight-
ly upward from left to right across
ind left a triangle of white
pocketing the two communlcaUona.
"I think be's done what he hoped
to do. At this time of year yoa'U see
dozen Spanish and Brittany onion
boats lying down by the Barbican at
Plymouth, every day of the week.
And if poor Bob got there, no doubt
plenty of chaps would hide htm when
ho offered 'em money enough to
make It worth while. Once aboard
one of those sloops, he'd be ubout as
safe aa ho would be anywhere.
They'd land him at St. Malo, or
somewhere down there, and he'd
give you the slip."
"And, until tt was found out that
ha waa mad, we might hear no more
about, him." >;
"Why should It bo found t^iat be
as mad?" asked Bendlgo. "He
waa mad when he killed thla Inno-
cent man, no doubt, because none
but a lunatic would have done such
an awful thing, or been eo cunning
after—with the sort of childish cun-
ning that gave him away from the
start. But once he'd dono wfeit
this twist In bis brain drove him
to'do, then I Judge that his madness
.jUs
a
the sheet and
pafsr at the right-hand bottom
rs
on
oil crooks and many
awaiting trial. All this may
r the horse was
but an e
illl
• "Dmt Ben:' It's all over. I've
done la Michael Pendean and put
him *Mes only Judgment Day will
find him. Something drove me to do
It; hot an the same I'm sorry now
It's dene—not for him but mysslt I
shall clsar tonight, with, luck, for
" rraaee. if I can send an address
later I wflL Look after Jenny—aba's
well rid of the blighter. Whan things
hsMrs blown over I may noma beak.
Tell Albsrt and toll Flo. Tours,
«>WV , "R, B."
" tha letter and
ft
caai
y«,
he
1st-
"WHY SHOULD IT BE FOUND
THAT HE WAS MAD7" ASKED
BENDIGO.
very likely loft him. If you caught
him tomorrow, you'd possibly find
him aa sane as yourself—except on
that one subject. He'd worked up
his old hatred of Michael Pendean,
as a shirker In the war, until it fes-
tered in hla head and poisoned his
mind, so as he couldn't get It under.
That'a how I read It. I had a pretty
good contempt for the poor chap
myself and was properly savags
with my niece, when she wedded htm
against our wishes; but my feeling
didn't turn my head, and I felt glad
to hear that Pendean was an honest
man, who did the best he could at
the Moss Depot"
Brendon considered.
"A very sound view," he Bald,
"and likely to be correct. On the
strength of this letter, we may con-
clude that fcrhen be went home, af-
ter disposing of the body under
Berry Head, your brother must have
disguised himself m some way and
taken an early train from Paignton
to Newton Abbot and from Newton
Abbot to Plymouth. He would al-
ready have been there and lying
low before the hunt began."
That's how I figure Jt,"
swered, the sailor.
* v Old'you last eee 'him,
(, f i ; ; . L < im
about ,h«—E:—
Not a.Word. Ho WtU*4tqfW«Ull - '
his young woman. They meant to
be married in late>isntniiin and gt)'
abroad for a tim to see my brother
Albert." • V% •
"Ho . may correspond fittk* Mpl '
Reed If ho.gets to IVancoT" , , , ,
"I cant say what heU 40. t Sup-
pos6 youtcatch him presently? How i
would this law etandf A man goes1
mad ord) commits a murdsr. . Then
you nab'him and he's fs same aa «:!
judge. You can't bang him for what
he did whan be waa off bis heat, and
you can't t shut him up In a lunatio
asylum ffrbeTs eons." 4' '
"A nice i problem, no doubt," ad-
mitted Brandon, "but . be aure the
law will take no risks. A homicidal
maniac.. no matter how sane ha Is
between times, is not going to run
loose anymore after killing a man."
"Well, rthatv all ther« hi to it, do-
tective. If I hear again, IH let the
police know;.and if you take him. of
courso you'll let me and his brother
know at once. It's a very ugly thing
for bis family. ■ He did good work in
the war and got honors: and If he's
mad. then the (war
"That woaldi bo
into account, its i
both for him said for' yau.
mayne." " 1 1
Bendlgo lookedisulkily from under
his tan pled eyebrows. '• '*'•
'I shouldn't fleel no<very great call
to give htm up -to the<llvlng death of
an asylum if be hove/in here some
night,"' . — 7 fs
"You'd do \ your duty—that I will
bet," replied Brandon.
They descended to the- dining-room,
where Jenny Pendeaa was waiting
to pour out boa. All were very si-
lent and Marlrhadtlelsure to«obesrre
tho young widow.
•What shall iyou*do and where may
I count upon finding you If I want
you, Mrs. Pendean?"'he asked pres-
ently.
She looked at/Rodmnyne, not at
Brendon, as she^answered.
"I can in Uncle Bendlgo's hands.
I know he wlllilet me stop hers for
the present."
"For keeps,"* the old sailor de-
clared. "Thla'la your home bow,
Jenny, and Ita vary glad to
you here. There's only you and
your Uncle /Albert and fpe now, 1.
reckon, for I don't' think'tre shall
ever see poor Bob again."
An elderly womnn came In. \
"Doria bo wlabfuD to know when
you'll want the boali" she said.
"I should like lb Immediately If'
possible," begged Brendon. "Much
time has been lost."
"Tell them to gottaboord. then."
directed Bendlgo, andjln five minutes
Mark wan taking bioJlsoiva
"I'll let you have the earliest
intimation of the capture, Mr. Bed-
mayne," he said. "If your poor
brother still Uvea, lit seems Impossi-
ble that he should/ long be tree. IflB
present condition must be one of
great torment andmnxlety—to him—
and for his own sake I bop* {he will
soon eurrender or bo found—If • not
in England, then In France."
"Thank you," answered tha older'
man quietly. "What you say Is
true. I regret the delay myseif now.
If ho is heard of again by ms^XIl
telegraph to Scotland Tatd, orfget
'em to do eo at Dartmouth. /I've
slung a telephone wire Into the
as you see."
They stood again under
staff on the plateau, and
studied the rugged etfff
Ihn flnMn nf +ti<t+ all
■
■ "i* ■:: : :■'T-.'hy, *' •.:*■■■■ '/'
W*?f.
r t;
f im'
\4§'-
i. ■ f fii
t. ■ v .
3 tf
JA
|k,«> v • y*T- ■ .'W ■
• n >'.* r;
* M f Wf ; -
to
1 : 1' i ([ ; • j' ' ;' • ' <
;J!,H PPODUtTS Rf'^1 ' >
' i
n
v:^W; \
, '. .MM
& ■
iMir'
' 1
1
i.
«
•hi",'?-'' '
• -
4
1
'i-
If
1
r J
■ a
H-lkf
j
1
United StatesTires
are Good Tires
-and "USCO"
it!
i |f
KMI.-
1
> Ms married
the fields of corn that
inland above It The
very lonely and only 1
oC a sotttary
mile or more distant to thai
"If he should coma to I
have still a fancy that he imay
so—take him In and let un^know."
said Brshdon. "Such a i
be unspeakably painful. X foe*, but X
'■X -•>'
? 'S
am very
from tt,
Th* '
_ you will notf
Redmayne."
old
V/OUR enthusiasm over "USCO" perform*
ance won't surprise the luototiat wJu> kaoWt
tho fabric tire field.
Every 30 x 3V2 tire user recognizee "1
, a value to be reapected and'tole igv
tlie useoiof aU8CO,H know it as a mone^i
wotth that came before the public as a leader
and that has inaintained itt UAdtrthip, J
* <^adc by people >vto
make Royal Cords.
wt, • , '
Si
I*;1
urn
In
r*?
t thenr
and
rsd beard.
r and full of
;-l a a.
you miy trust I
to <
!]■
>.
r j:
.
1
m
;vi
1
■'''■: '■&>
mm '
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Orange Daily Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 152, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 27, 1923, newspaper, June 27, 1923; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth330475/m1/4/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.