Morning Examiner. (Bartlesville, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 347, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 22, 1910 Page: 4 of 4
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MOEHINO BXAMIKBt
BAKTIX8VXLXS. OKLAHOMA.
SATURDAY, JAWUARY 28, lttl(
S
H
0
E
S
Extra Value Without
Extra Price
HOW, OF Mi TIMES, WITH SMALL CHAM6E.
rm M EASILY 60 WELL.SHOD
Men's $5.00 and $6.00 Values
Mod's $7.50 ind $0 High Cots
Women's $2.50 and {3 values
$2.75
$5.95
$1.65
Womeo's $3.50 and $4.talues! $2.45
$
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0
E
Yes, Wo lo All Kills
of SkM Ropiiriig
Gormoo, The Shoeman
The Horo ot 6o i
Shots
before the second Monday in July. |ig an island of Cuba because you
This was done by the city and tln' l say you have seen it, 1 believe you bc-
gcbool board. Six weeks later both city cause there is jiothing in it for you
and school board attempted to in
crease their levies, but the county
clerk refused to put the additional
taxes on the books. Mandamus pro-
ceedings were instituted in the district
court to compei the clerk to #eceii-e
and put on the tax rolls the addi-
tional levies, and the court so order-
fourteen tablecloths or bedshee:s I breaking up homes ,*n this city. '
sewed together, with the long end j Almighty give us pure men.
thrown over the shoulder. That gar- night a young girl came to see
to lie about. Also there is history
and geography. But I have a thou-
sand times bettor proof that there is
little " island palled heaven, thin
there is a Cuba. I've got the proof
of the Bihle^ proof of history and
relicrious geography and beyond that I
have internal evidence in my heart to
ed. Attorney General West and oth- know that there is a heaven. Then
er state officials advise that inae-1 f believe because 1 want it.
much as the court ordered the extra,
or alleged illegal, levies placed on
the tax rolls, the court alone had the
power and authority to order them
stricken off again.
Church Not Yellow Dog to
be Kicked Under Table.
(Continued from Page One.)
PERSONALS
AND LOCALS
Furnished room lor rant. Newport
Cafe. ■
J. J. Dean, of Kansas City, is here
on business.
John B. Churohill returned yester-
day from Guthrie.
C. A. Richards went to Hominy
yesterday to be, gone several days.
C. T. Benner was in Peru. Kan.,
yesterday on business.
A. E. Craver was in Copan yester-
day on legal business.
E. J. Maire, of Lima, Ohio, is in
the city on business.
Charles Linard went to Deering.
Kan., to be gone several weeks.
J. C. Dauphertv of Dewey, was in
the city yesterday on legal business.
Mrs. Lucinda Ford, of Portland,
is visiting her son, C. A. Richards.
Frank Lane of Arkansas City, is
in the city as a guest of Rube Hough-
ton.
R. J. - Major and family. , £
Leo Barnett, the railroad mail clerk
who waa operated on at the hospital
for appendicitis and who has been in
a very dangerous condition, is slowly
recovering from the effects of the op-
eration. __
In the district conrt yesterday af-
ternoon Judge Shea granted Tillie
Thayer a divorce from O. G. Thayer
and Liwie Foullcs secured one from
(! rover Foulks. The suit of M. King
vs. Dewey Portland Cement comparty.
was dismissed on a demurrer to evi-
dence. King asked $15,000 for in-
juries received while working in the
plant. His ankle was broken, a ce-
ment mixer falling on it.
A Night Rider'i Raid
The worst night riders are calo-
mel, croton oil or aloes pilto. They
raid your bed to rob!yon of rest. Not
so with Dr. King's New Life Pills.
They never distress or inconvenience,
but always cleanse the system, curing
Colds, Headache, Constipation, Malar-
a. 25c at the Star Drug Store.
Hon. James A. Vcasey and Judge
if Reduction of Suita and OracoaU
for 30 Days.
38 Suits and Overcoats $32.50
A Few
$35 Suits and Overcoats $30.
H. 8. SNYDER,
Merchant Tailor.
211 E. Third Street.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is a
ery valuable medicine for throat and
ung troubles, quickly relieves and
.ures painful breathing and a dan-
gerously sounding cough which indi-
cates congested lungs. Sold by all
daalua.
Polly of the Circus.''
Mr. Abrams, agent for "Polly if
the Circus,'" was in town yesterday.
The candy privilege was sold at a big
price to Jno. DeHart. Charley Hodge
got the red lemonade sole right, Bill
Turner salted peanuts and Jno. Flinn
side show speiler.
Watch for the big street parade
when "Polly of the Circus" comes to
town. It's a real show.
The busiest and mightiest little thing
that ever was made is Chamberlain's
t llrtx ,=Lr"""y *• *"
in Nowata on legal business.
Work 24 Bonn a Day
The bnaiest little things ever made
are Dr. King's New Life Pills. Every
pill is a sugar-coated globule of
health, that changes weakness into
strength, languor into energy, brain-
fag into mental power; earing Con-
pstion, Headache, Chills, Dvapep-
work whenever you require their aid.
These tablets change weakness into
•trength, listless ness into energy
gloominess into joyonsness. Their
action is so gentle one don't realize
they have taken a purgative. Sold by
all dealers.
Slaughterville, Ky., are visiting 0. C. sia, Malaria. 25c at The Star Drug
Major on Wyandotte avenue 1 Store.
Mrs. L. A. Closson. of Pern, Kan.,
is visiting her sons, L. D. Closson
and H. A. Custer.
R. E. Beaver and family have re-
Will Open Sunday
You are especial,-)* invited to buy
your dinner at the Square Eating
House. 322 Dewey avenue. Sunday.
Mary Lambergen, is you know, is a
moved from 113 East Eeventh stree{ ,.ook and an „oen<,nt
.. -a*
to 704 ennings avenue.
All the la teat magsrinea, periodi-
cals and Sunday newspapers at the
Star Drug Store. tf.
Sanitary Officer S. W. Knisely
killed a dog yesterday on Sixth street
it showing signs of hydrophobia
Piano Tnning
C. M. Richards is now here. Or-
ders mav be left with Mr Wavne
Mendell.
A marriage license was issued yes-
terday in the probate court to Joseph
Brady, age 33, and Miss Foonia Stew-
ard. age 22, both of Dewey.
Mr. Burt Sturm, foreman of the
grand jury, retrned to his home in
Ochelata Friday to spend the vacation
given the grand jury untir Mondnv
Mr. and Mrs. D. O. 'MeCormick who
removed from this eitjr to Tulsa last
summer, have returned and are now
living at 500 Keler avenue.
Chamberlain 'a Cough Remedy it not
common, every-day cough mixture.
It is a meritorious remedy for all
he troublesome and dangerous com-
plications resulting from cold in the
.ead. threat, eheat or longs. Sold by
all dealers.
table.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy never
.isappoints those who use it for ob-
tinate coughs, colds and irritations
f the throat and lungs. It stands un-
ivailed as aremedy for all throat and
vng diseases. Sold by all dealers.
Notice Calling for School Warrants
Notice is hereby given that out-
standing warrants, numbered 165 to
306 inclusive of the Board of Edu
cation of the City of Bartlesville.
Oklahoma, for the fiscal year ending
June 30, 1910. will be paid upon
presentation to the undersigned.
The holders of ill such warrants
are hereby notified that the same will
draw no interest from and after the
13th dav of February 1910.
JNO. L. HATS.
Treasurer Board of Education
Dated Januarv 19. 1910.
(Insert 19-21-23.)
Vitagraph Feature Comedy
Drama:
"THE TOYNAKER'S SECRET"
Chinese Vaudeville:
THE MAID AND THE BURGLAR
The Laughing Comedy:
( "ELECTRIC INSOLES"
j
Pathe's Comedy:
-XTHE MIXED LETTERS "
tohi^te<f{tonis*Qood Mnsic
SBSSy«aB «SgggSg^
be- Admission- IOc
Have you a weak throat T If so. you
cannot be too careful. You cannot be
gin treatment too early. Each cold
makes you more liable to another and
the last is always the harder to core.
If you will take Chamberlain's Cough
Remedv at the outset you will
saved much
dealers.
be
trouble. Sold by all
Bn Order of Court Only.
, (Continued from Page One.)
atniner Taylor and Auditor Trapp, he
learned the only hope the people here
have is to enjoin the county treasure
to prevent the collection 'of the tax ;s.
Attorney fleneral West and Mr. Oor-
den discussed the matter from every
view point nnd went into every le
gal phase of the all important que*
tion. Finally Mr. West told him that
it would be impossible to frame
bill that wonld cover the case and
that the only avenue left open to the
people of this city whs to enjoin the
collection of taxes.
Under the law all taxes mnst be
certified to the county clerk on
BED CROSS DRUG STORE,,
have faith. It is faith that makes
a man put $4,000 in an oilwell who
has never seen the oil and only has
surface indications that there is oili
I have faith in the railroad company
every time I get on a train. In the
name of God, what do you mean when
yon tell me not to have faith in God
when I know that he made me? Tf
you think you have only a little
faith, don't be discouraged but use
what you have. It is not the size of
the faith that saves you. but the size
of the savior. There is not a single
place in the whole Rihle where it
says that it is faith that saves you,
Faith is only the hand stretched out
or the means to save you, the means
by which you get to Christ. You
had better say yon have a little faith
in a wonderful savior than to say that
you have a wonderful faith in a :it-
tle savior.
"I was lost on the prairie once
when the thermometer was 10 below
zero I had .afonc to find a man who
lost. I had not irot far away 'n
a branch to a bush nnd in a lit-
tle while I came to that bush. Then
T left it to the horse and soon T
thonght I saw a ligM T could not be-
lieve it, something told me T was half
dead from cold and was gettinir delir-
ious. You know T was an infidel law-
yer at that time and used to doubt-
ills'. Well. T put my faith in that
star of li?ht and the horse brought
me to an Indian's camp. The Indi-
ans are of the best people in the
world if you treat them right. They
took me in and I was saved, saved
by the faith in that star of light,
that kept getting brighter all he way.
The light never gets bright on the
side where the bootlegger is, so gjt
over on the right side.
The book says Bartimaeus threw
aside his garment and ran to the
feet of Jesus. T am glad that's 'n
there about the garment. The gar-
ment meant in that sentence was
worn at that time and was like about
man's eyes he did something he did
not need to advertise. Von can't
give a blind man his sight without
many people knowing about it. It'
the church members of Bartlesville
will let the Lord restore their sight
others will know about it very soon.
was married at Chicago to a little
Welsh girl who had been educated «n
England. She had come all the way-
Chicago to get a good husband
from North Carolina. And when she
got me she proved the udage that the
best looking women marry the homeli-the snow when T knew T was lost, I
husbands. Just after we got; '
married my wife commenced to hoe
off the rough corners she found on
me, and she hasn't got done hoeing
yet. One of the tlrst attempts of
tfois kind she made was when one
day I came to her and said, 'I'm in
hurry, honey, and I will have to
ask you to curry Dick.' Dick was
my riding horse. She said, 'Don't
say that, dear. You mean groom,
not curry.' Well, shortly after that
asked her to come with me down
to North Carolina and see my folks.
wanted her to see where I was
born, down among the people who
used to eat hog and hominy, corn
bread and buttermilk. When we got
into my old state and up among the
mountains we saw men driving aboit
,500 shejp, and every one of then
r.d a red spot on its hip. My wife
asked me what that was for. All yiu
have to do with a woman is to give
her rope enough and she will hang
herself. She said, 'But, dear, how
is it that all the sheep have the same
spot in the same place? Is it
birthmark?' Think of that. A birth-
mark on every one of 4,500 sheep.
When I got through nudging and
laughing at her T explained that
this mark was put on by state officials
to prevent the drovers from stealing
sheep belonging to some one else.
Then she turned to me and said, 'You
better go back to Chicago and try
that on the members of your church
so you can tell sheep from goats.'
If you are on God's side, there >«
no question where yon are going to
ne up. 7f you have your eves op
ened others wHl see that you can see
A man came to me today and said he
wanted to he counted as one of my
inverts. When I asked him why h-
iind made this- decision he said h*
eojld not rd to line up with the
bootleguers rnd the gamblers. There •
VdJe ground. You've got to get
ne side er the other. Get on the
right side and show that the church
of Jesus Christ is not a yellow dog
to be kicked under the table and
sneered at. If your eyes are openad
and the people of Bartlesville don't
know it. for God's sake get them op-
ened wider so other people can see
that you can see.
"Bartimaeus didn't knew a great
deal for he was an ignorant man. Bat
what he did know he knew. When
the wise men put him on the witness
stand and began to question him he
stuck to what he knew. I met a man
in Bartlesville who said he could be-
lieve nothing he could not see. How
many of you were ever in Cuba? Four.
All right. Now you four know there
is an island of Cuba because you have
seen it. Now how many are there
who believe there is such an islnad
but who have never been there? What
all that nnmber? Then what a pack
of fools that man must think you,
believing something you have never
seen. I believe vou four that there
meat, is sin. God promises to sav«
you from sin, but not in sin. If you
cast aside the garment of sin you can
get save£ tonight. When I wis
preaching in Western New York I had
man who came to church every
Sunday and he was an agnostic. He
was a bright young man and promi-
nent in the Republican party. Hi
wanted to get the nomination for gov-
nor. so he went to church to get
votes. I preached six sermons on sin
and this fallow stopped coming to
hear me. Then he went to the pre-
siding elder and complained about me.
The elder to' 1 me I had better stick
to straight sermons for the young
man was a good man and I shou'd
not offend him. I asked him when he
had seen the man and then I told him
that the last time I had seen him
was at his mother's home. While I
was there a good old Dutchman of
the neighborhood came to find that
man. In one of his hands he held a
shotgun and the other held the hand
of his sobbing daughter. The old
man came into the room and dropp-
ing his daughter's hand he pointed
the gun at the young fellow's head
and said, 'You marry this girl or
I'll blow your head off quicker than
hell can scorch a feather. Her moth-
er is dead and she is a poor girl who
worked in a kitchen. You seduced lwr
and now you niarrv her or I'll blow
the devil out of you.* AnH tie did.
They came ami called me and 1 mar-
ried them. Ves, 1 did and I am glad
I did. She was juat as good as he
was if she did work in a kitchen.
Well, the young fellow married her
and when the ceremony was over he
kissed her and took her to his moth-
er. His mother took the girl in and
they got along all right. Pretty soon
he wanted me to take them in the
church, but wanted it done" on the
quiet. 1 told him there was no side
door to heaven and they had to come
down the aisle like every one else.
That's the way they ought to come
into the church. When God forgives
a fallen man or a fallen woman he
means it. When a girl falls into sin
and God forgives her she stands as
though the sin had never been com-
mitted. And you ought to do the
same thing or you have not got re-
ligion.
•'I tell you, people of Bartlesville,
it's sin that is cursing you. The
same sin that cursed that girl is
She wanted me to pray for a y«
man the wa engaged to, becauw
was a drinking man. I said to
• Don't you do it. fym't you marry
till he proves td you that he
stopped drinking and stopped for<
Whenever a man asks you young i
to marry him to sober him, tell
you 're not running a Keeley insti
In the name of God, women, wak
on this subject. What is the
edy for this awful sin of di
What Can Wash My Sin Awt
You know the rest.
God speed the day when that
ster King Alcohol is banished
the land. It is not the infidel
is damning Bartlesville, it is no
agnostic, it's nothing like that
I was to drop dead tonight and
was my last word I'd say that i
sin that is damning Bartlesville
now. There is a cure and a phyi
to administer the cure, a phy
who is without pay and without
"It was a good thing for 1
maeus that he found Jesus tha
for that was the |afcit tin*
passed on that road. Jesus is p
this way tonight and it may be f
last time. That's a fact, folks
may never pass again. If you
him for your eyesight you wi
it.''
YALE
TODAY ONLY
One of the best pictures i
produced by the Selig
company.
Under Stars and Stripei
Kalem Great Drama
Romance of a Trained N
Pathe's Detective Stor;
The Last Look
Pathe's Comedy
His Opponent's Card
1:30 to 5:30 6:30 to I
I
[aderer-Baird Clothing Qi
x
f
t
♦
♦
t
i
t
♦%
ARE STILL HAVING THEIR
in*
j tUKk WML "
We hayfejust completed a new addition to our p. /
scription department, wfiich- was aifcady the largest and best
!! stocked in the state, and we are now better prepared than
j\ ever to fill any arid all prescriptions brought to us.
OKLAH
THEATRE
JOHN F. FLINN, Mgr.
ONE NIOHT
Tuesday, January 25
OILSON A BRADFIKLD
Offer James Kyrle Mac
y's Great Pl vy
■■tot4
With Hirbart Da (team and
FlnrtViot Thompson aup-
p.i ted by a capable
coippany,
> HiV MfFEIEMT FMM OTNEHS
You'll ike "The Old Clothe*
Man." See if yon don't
■ i ■ ■ ItHBamMMan
MPtflAlt moil
BIG REMOVAL SALE
We're still selling your choice of any Suit (
Overcoat in the store at One-Half Price. Nev
before in the history of Bartlesville has clothii
£|been sold so cheap, and never again.
i Nothing reserved. We're not going to mo1
X any more merchandise than we can possiby hel
| hence this great reduction.
DURING THIS GREAT REM0VAI
SALE YOU CAN BUY
$17.51
$15.0
$ 13.7!
$12.5
$10.0
$ 7.5
Boys' and Children's Suits an
Overcoats at Half Price
$35.00 SUITS AND OVERCOATS
FOR
$30.00 SUITS AND OVERCOATS
FOR
$27.50 SUITS AND OVERCOATS
FOR
$25.00 SUITS AND OVERCOATS
FOR
$20.00 SUITS AND OVERCOATS
FOR
$15.00 SUITS AND OVERCOATS
FOR
Remember it's not long until we move. Don't delay! Sp
the time and come now. Ifsup to yost* hurry! Every Soft.
> Overcoat marked in Plain Figures—and nothing reserved.
>
fladerer-Baird Clothing Co,
1 * u j loiwmww r r n
103-105 East Second St. Bartlesville, Oklaho
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Booth, R. F. Morning Examiner. (Bartlesville, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 347, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 22, 1910, newspaper, January 22, 1910; Bartlesville, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc144322/m1/4/: accessed June 14, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.