Shawnee Daily Herald. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 37, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 22, 1909 Page: 4 of 8
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FOUR
'Twas Yesterday
*Tis Today
"Twill bo Tomorrow.
Just Plain Old
Fashioned Banking
In Policy.
In the conduct of our business
We offer up-to-date service and
every facility to make doing
business with this bank
Pleasant.
THE SHAWNEE HERALD SUNDAY, AUGUST 22
public. Ex-Commissioner Hagar
was condemned and actually Indicted
and tried for making a contract In
the name of the county that was de-
clared to be exhorbltant, yet that
very claim upon which Hagar was In-
dicted and tried was voted for bv
Price before It was paid.
And yet Mr. Price declares be
would hide the books from the state
examiner.
Surely he will be given an oppor-
tunity to explain.
WHY ALL THE COST?
BANK OF COMMERCE
Shawnee, Okla.
IDE SHAWNEE DAW HERALD
Who's Who And What's
What In Oklahoma
[ Of course (iov. Haskell has a right
to believe that he will ri-tlr. from
public life after his term as Governor
expires, hut men have been known
to change their views to meet de-
mands of the hour. The Herald does
not believe that Gov. Haskell has
completed tne career a conservative
estimate of his finished administra-
Hon will define. There is sufficient
Governor, to talk of the "sim-
wlth his own Cashius M. Cdae h
cured endorsements from Denn<
H.vnn, Congressmen Creager
a half score of let's"'lumLn,"' charac-jaf I?'fl.ll a llke place
thawnee Herald, and If such
and ZV£rm£t£?^ th8t dlgnltar^
he place, then the editor
granted us.
4t]8ffis.s*sar
We accept.
time
Believing thai no one can object
and that all will bo Interested, tholple life".
Herald proposes to show from time « • •
ta i"e' W.'"" " costs Pott. conuty Judge William Bowles of Perry who
s ivlM'd,8tlncttoa
It proposes to give the inside work
ngs of the drainage question, a most Icratlc water. "Bill" Bowles -is ho io
Interesting topic Just now to the — '—"owies, as he Is
, 4_, . dis-
trict court, is the first candidate for
governor to be launched upon Demo-
BY STATE! IMTIII.INIIlNa CO.
V. a, HiimhHI, lOdlfor.
* K' ItuNlnr.. Mannri
*e«>oiid-C laa«( Mnt"lluite*0"0'"*' *'
M OF Nirils«-|(i|>7|OIV.
^rrier. per week
On© Year
81* Mont hn .
Three Months
One Month
ictents of the south end of county
Before the year Is out official reports
and reviews of what has been done
by public officials should enable the
voters to act with Intelligence In
choosing their next corps of officials.
$4.00
2.00
1.00
aASTKIt * ADVKRTINI'.fi ,(lr„l>u<
N-SrVor'k "ntv Ka\X' Temple^ o"®:
llunlnt-** Office, 27H
Kdlturlnl Ofll<# , 804.
TO THK
HUM A I
ShHnnrf nnnoum
«■<•> for tin
'BOPLR OF OKI.A-
past relative
and pending
nmcy f„r tUe l'eri.,MfIent Seat . f
IGNORANCE OF CONDITIONS VS.
UNDESIRABLE PUBLICITY.
Quite Often the Herald Is criticised
hrttfnTth ha',pur8,,<'<1 Policy of
lotting the people know what 1h beine
£« bem'd d0np nd *"><
iras oeen done in the
to municipal properties
public works.
It is charged that "undesirable pub-
Hetty Injures the city"
Admitting that there is one grain
Of reason to this greatly exaggerated
fear, can It be said that publllcty
does not eliminate undesirable ron
nm i"f' i?'lVellt mentions and deter
p"rPntl>?*0m ,"'"ratl'"!: '"Usances and
uTf ?5 " of ,mbllr funds?
no, if not the public press, could
,0, |)9r'orm ll,l« mission?
- a ""''"W'-'i™ Iwr
Could the laboring man wtio per
haps owes Ills position to the grace
«^tjnnrcrifTcenAr,p,doc^
th," u11" ,',over b « the pulley
the Herald to be hasty In Its'
w™ '?< wbo ari' responsible
infract ioriK of laws and
decency that are
Ever notice It? The wife who
poes shopping and pays as she buys
does more ihnn carry the purse, she
has the confidence of her husband
and admits It with her smile of happi-
ness. 11
Proceeding under the theory that
comfort itself appeals to the nobler
sentiments of man, a commendable
step has been taken by lady shop
pers at Ft. Worth and Dullas. In
their clubs and societies a vote was
cast expressing permission to the
gentlemen clerks in shops and stores
to relieve themselves of coats while
on duty during the heated term,
'hat Ls scattering sunshine as well
a-s combating heat waves at the same
time—a most sensible conclusion
The Labor Day celebration can not
De made too general.
capable
• v" ":nn iwuiiuuuH cnarac- a
H once familiar with governmental 'gi
per diems.
1 he rest was easy. Tomorrow
commission will arrive. ir brines I Fi r0,7"
Joy and a salary of $2,000 for eigb, j - ° Den,ocrat
months work, besides the partial die-,
tation of three hundred census enum. i "*
erators throughout the district Llnht of R Finally Sees
Now. if Cash Cade can only work1 e,"°n'
his grave yard rabbit's foot' once : administratkr'fn"g i!b° Presem slate
more and secure fnr hio |4l_ ation for its every act in
the Tulsa World (Rep.),
SPEAKER MISSED THE POINT.
Report o
* Meeting of Earnest
Women That May or May Not
Be Exact.
more and secure for his ardent as- theTast
eighteen'^ blacksmith, abou'I finally ad
public trough, he will haTe" proven | Iml'^eads" thE"'nmiL?180*"'' Yo" are suffering.
th I68, said the flrst speaker at
he suffragette meeting, "I am here
this afternoon to tell you how to be
happy. I am here to tell you how to
solve your greatest problem."
Applause, rustle of silks and flutter
or rurs.
"1 know Von are badly used. Tou
OBSERVATIONS
SL . You are "restricted1
familiarly known, ls a most
fellow; learned in the law-
nifled bearing and pleasing personal-1thre
"y, but Is handicapped by a limited s,,nibled
acquaintance. Ills experience in pub-
lic has been confined to county serv-
ice and a term In the Territorial
legislature. In the battles for state-
hood, it Is true (he was on the firing
line but in the contests that follow-
ed few on the east side of the state
ever heard of William Howies of
Perry. This isthe most serious ob-
jection raised by politicians and
writers who watch public sentiment,
but in Oklahoma there are many who
nnhn^l "° f'Xed Crit"r' n to
publical ascendancy and that
Howies or some man less known to
, general Public, may materialize
at the proper moment. It Is early
■aiIy to start the campaign.
that the day of empty honors dawned [trust-'68''8 ''liS U'tlmatum to that
lnaOk.aitoiia^e:te,nt^!,p.Teri8In l.t^Tuh r^"77 °'NM* ulU—
oEL ,espect 10 ol1 conditions in
- KJITSS sa=l ~?~sa ru-us
More applause.
Freedom is what you want. More
liberty and less pain! It is your right
too
turnpikes compared with
the paths across the hills and gul-
« Pittsburg county, and vet
PlWsburg county is in the throes of
a ,crragn to iss,,e bonds i°bund
a court house at McAlester. It will
be years after the big red barns
adorn the farms of those counties
Paying heed to the demands of the | part and"
t* ,he rural dis for vou
that Pittsburg county wakes I contract oT
MidCom? ,0 the Pre8= "'the I br">* ^u relief. , bring you a
Mid Continent OM & Gas Producers'| that will remove the con
OKLAHOMA BREVITIES
t
Gov.
Haskell has repeatedly said
would retire from public life at
the conclusion of his present term of
office. Ho now declares he will con-
tinue his weekly newspaper at Ok-
lahoma City.
Oklahoma county Republicans will
oppose the nomination of thoir fellow
citizen, Gristmill oJnes, for governor
Too much Jones, they insist
Ite harmony at best
personal-Lthre.e. counties had roads that re- -Mid Continent OU
«n fac-t. an ultima-
turn to the people of the Imperial
commonwealth of Okiahoma^n ulti'
matum which, shorn of all persiflage
and useless- diction, reads thus S
Turn your state over to us and
promise not to attempt to protect
>ourselves against aggression on our
wealth producers In T^e'Tu^r d'uif^ a"d We'" BP" w"at we can do
tr^s, that Pittsburg countv wakes contract BUt' m'"d ^ou- here's no
up to find her court house a m^H Z " 0r eVe" ,,ron,lse on " r
expensive means of driving trade tn r, ,
other towns. L«, okiahogma bu|Id exhlbU th g ^ "ny man should
roads, school houses, churches and' a nro^ <m 8rlty to "resent sl|ch
barns now—court houses later. people™ 11 red-blooded
shorn!? n<>t nefS3ary that th" World
lould counsel the people of Okla-
i , , Ta ? 8tand pat- f,,r unless it mis-
i takes the sentiment and the temper
* a°nythaedreP'e ,he5' ^ 90 —
Exquis-
Charlie
been
Cade,
man
would
coun-
•'udge Sandlln of the
perlor Court says Amber
intoxicant and must go.
Guthrie Su-
Mead Is
of
crltl-
? for
rules of
~ p,,entlal to public
hrli tr Jns'ead " has sought to
Bring about changed conditions when
ZZ , by ,"timatl"n rather than
Kvlew.""""1,"0", " h"! published
with l'CT6d statements
others who have assumed full
sXnRTl,>;il,°r thelr 8,®tements
Seldom has this paper discovered its
erroneous in dealing
' Peeler dropped dead while
watching a base ball game at Okla
noma City. Heart trouble.
• • *
Municipal bonds to the value of
.>,000 Issued by the city of Chand
T. are missing. Said to have been
stolen from an express company.
Now comes the Miller Bros, of lot I
ranch, wild-west show fame and of
rs a purse to get the heavy weight
pugilists of America to fight in Okla
wum advertising scheme.
I he Millers know such a thing would
not be tolerated In the new state.
Oklahoma City taxpayers are In-
censed over the scheme to locate tho
city hall somewhere just west of
Shawnee city limits
Chappel, of Asher, is
ucky cuss. For years he has
the megaphone of Casslus M.
Republican National Committee
of Oklahoma. At times Cash
actually take Charlie out of th
sarvhenTLPOllUoa' J""ket wa8 m>ccs-
Charhe in8" °|iportunUle8 afforded
hat lie ga\e him a thirst for the
Juicy crust „f u federal pie. True
he had been County Commissioner of
o themes.rU",y aD? 'atCr a me™ber
or the state committee, but those
things are not rated with a corrumis-
slon bearing the great seal of the
federal government
So Charlie bided his time He
masked ills guns so as to keep down
local agitation, donned the thirtv
dollar sua of clothes he won from
v . ti"*" 0,1 the Bryan-Taft
vot( In Pottawatomie county and
went scouting for a census job! There
we e four applicants for the super
This "nut r„?'US Work 1,1 this district.
J, "u'ild.."°t. Hcar« the Asher Knight
Button. Beginning
With Oklahoma Editors
Of the Hidde
Who Says an Editor
Can Not Preach?
tinnThat,an editor Can ?i" an>' POSi-
Cnt !Sned to hlm is evidenced by
2°': Sidney Suggs, editor of the Ard
more Ardmoreite appearing in a "lav
sermon at one of the Ardmore
churches last Sunday, due To a
get ine s,chcm? of a Ioea' minister to
,get in closer touch with the business
■and professional men, bv giving one
fin" the ani,hu'th i° on,i of thcii' «o
Kev (v.t !! ' , From a contour of
phv«l«Si hUK,BR "H'"taI capacity and
wc , „d lPlaCeT?t' w" kno«' ^
b rtiilJ mik j and w'hHe not
strict 1> orthodox we believe that the
ermon by Sidney Sug^, exiK.unded
is true ('"hPr,Hh0lnPSl Way' breathed
nL t Christianity as that of anv
h"m 11° cgr?'7 ,h(' pull,it "
nim, toi Col. Suggs is a man who
feMoewVn?enand ^ th<> of hia
an^ortTf 8lnce, Co! S"SS«. famous as
an editor and publisher, an accordeon
ing ha° f'L the ",e 01 a I"'1'88 meet-
ing, has taken to a
from the Enid
tut . stunt in the Pul-
Wt we now ask for volunteers
among the El Reno ministers for the
use Of a pulpit one Sunday for " '
v. S. Russell, the
Just Before the Typewriter
Wore a Hot Box.
Laborious efort
, Wave-Democrat:
* r,hvaps"d5' rushing ruthlessly
alon,g the highway to success chal
- e adlJ''ratlon Of all students
1L J f e,..but U often ,os°s the
.ffect from the lack of truth being
on "Ti hUI Wh8n y°U 8|,<' or hear an
one dilating on the beauties and pos-
stbllitles of Oklahoma, never
afraid of an over-doing of the subject
for the half has never been told.
Cash Cade Will Hardly
Dare to Attempt It.
Hobart Chief-Democrat: It is true
and um'n 'S a Wily P°'"-ician
and usually out-genarals the bosses in
his own party, but If "Bill" Murrav
•™t<^'<'S 'he nominee of the demo-
K "", y hp wl" ahow Mr. Cade
.ow-wows aUende<I 8 feW |K,"tl<al
. , ivmutc lue
ti iaDd h<?lp you- 11 wl" allow you
snent , PeaCe a"d to ,earn that time
pent at your dressing tables is
again ^d in'' Wl" fr6e you 80 that never
again will you have that feeling of be-
g pressed in, of restriction, and its
attendant sorrows."
Cries of "O my, do tell us how!"
ballot" Vnt'68;1 Wl" 1611 you" B^the
, Vote 'or women! You elect
will 'araker8 of the land and you
nrpH "°t.be tie(l down, restricted,
pressed in, restrained. You will have
freedom. You will have—
sniffs 'h.e audience was departing with
sniffs of disappointment.
on"thly'! Sput,ered a pretty woman
on the steps, "how on earth can you
be a perfect straight-back 36-inch un-
ess you are tied down and pressed
in. And what has the ballot got to
Times " anyhow'"—New York
Oil interests In Oklahoma are sore
I he Standard controls the pipe lines
and refuses to take th
independent producers.
are being depopulated.
product of
Oil towns
k. H. Russell went to Joplin Mo
jesterday to spend a few days' with
his family, which is visiting there
He will likely embark In business in
versatile editor of shawnee within . few week,".8
THREE SERMQNETTES ON THE niHFR .Sinp¥TFfp
'>>V'S From Adual Happenings Recorded on Summer Night's History "
rT WAS on the two
o'clock round-
Position to be
with local affairs.
lb?T°,?et reC"M Watcr agitation
th , ,, , '"s"d 1(8 Position upon
of th J,°g, y consUtuted authorlt y
sttttp chemist of
cer^ rih Tm",, "a|w' ha8 "o con
ern in the bickerings of anv nro-
fesslona! organization or set of men.
It believes honestly that Shawnee
rWeauH of0",hi lK' "n,l>rov<,d- and as a
15.,' of lhls Persistent poHcv the
public seems to have finally spoken
When the council made a moT at
ts last session to Increase the ca
Kyat0U.em!'l"nCy 0f ,h" "anltary
?f th u ,C y PuniP'ng station.
Ini ,i " was wru"- 'n (leclar-
flcfert ,* 1'rt's'-'"1t waterworks Insuf-
ficient to properly treat the city water
rhend't ?n "J 'he State
Chemist, has been erroneously ao
y council of this V
tnat the management of the cltv
waterworks plant has not been sat
isfaetory t0 the Interests of the ctiy
is now charged. As yet this paper
has not gathered sufficient evidence
Jo Permit It to assume a conservntlv.
Position but It will admit, and frank
at hand lh",n' has bPen evidence
at hand recently to prove the neoes
Attendance at State University will
:coed one thousand.
* * *
Town or Thomas celebrated seventh
anniversary Friday and Saturday.
Pre® hundred Indians participated.
Tho Governor was among the noted
s>peakers.
• ♦ ♦
B P. Henry, Imrber at Weatherford
arrested on charge of desertion. Wife
and family is destitute circumstances
• • •
Mormon elders active near Poteau
May establish church.
Old Settlers and oMdern Woodmen
nave combined to give
at Norman, August 27th.
big plfliic
piessure on th
\IT 1,8 f°; flr" flKh,l « Purposes.
Recent conflagrations point to this
stronger than the statements of any
man who may have a grievance with
-he Superintendent of Waterworks
Pacts are facts, and when the fire de
partment Is hampered for lack of suf-
nclent pressure then It behooves the
til* inV09tl«at(' " behooves the
Herald, as „ representative news
Paper, to tell the people.
«nTM liiin® J>0,lcy of tho Herald.
and this will be the policy adhered
to Can such a course prove dis-
Mtrous to the city?
JUST A DIFFERENCE IN THE OX.
Commissioner Price has a peculiar
Way of understanding the public He
would make himself believe that the
County Commissioner who votes to
j y the people's money for anv cer-
?r.tlcle ordered by the county
crl tic to" ?whUe"the* purchasing "aren't' I h" ti "Th 1Dey aeenu><i to
himself merit, the c^^emnaUon of pua^e. than ,h° °k,ahoma
Mrs. Anna Kust, a widow of Wynne-
wood is plaintiff In a breach of prom-
ise suit brought against James Kemp
a local miller. "| never knew whit
a kiss Was until I met you", wrote
Kemp, and the letter Is now a part
of the evidence that Is used to secure
a balm of 910,000.
« * «
Harry Edwards, charged with the
murder of his sister, Mary Teame
is held at Woodward without bond
• • «
Madlirs first bale of cotton sold
ior 111.00. A premium of $22 was
also presented.
« PLEA F0R A BRUTE, >M ....
I,'ie knew that man is not all bad ! Who knows what that film sermon
A Herald reporter was making , 8 as ttle sun scatters the i meant to this one family''
niTj8 , r?U"d of streets for the ^°"ds- ,,the moment of rage would be 0 '
P jkll.ls up whatever might have 'ollowed b-v hours of repentance. He; A MONSTER
happened Since his last trip around kne"'I®' ''aim of his repentance I
earlier in the night. ' , would heal over the bruises of the I
He was riding a bicycle ' !'<'atl'"K' as 'ar as she was concered. I
At the corner of Main -inn u n ^ ' beaure tho man deserved to pay
heard from the non h the muffled nels^bSt E d" th^lim™ regPetf!"- T "ohier instincts that
a'seuffl 0'.a,.W(""an and the sounds of made to a d paying he penally hTilo^h y""""' " Victlm of drink
of "a babe. * — -I, J-^^d X i'LTSJK
«>• "Why certainly. "was
a big hulk in the shape of man nick be a ,avor to her t0 Place cwgpaper workers In response to
' "" -^n "!* bod"y aad throw ^gherahZagheer''here ^ COnW ""iMat, ^M^VZSr ^w
Perhaps so. I0?611 in a cottage home and the flood
Perhaps not. (,f Hght from within revealed the
Her plea should be sufficient ana- 2ru?ken and totter«nK form of a big
wer. burly creature clasping to his breast
And then, there was tne baby— ,l terri"ed infant of less than two
After all, didn't the policeman do years-
right ? The mothe
IN THE FORM OF
MAN.
(ARVED IN the image of man,
yet a monster bereft of all the
llttl
sickening thud.
a Uttl
her to the sidewalk with A curse The
woman struck the curb with a
Somo twenty feet
away, in Its perambulator, a little
babe wailed in fear or lonesomeness
The newspaper man rode by and see-
ing the trouble turned back to Main
!«!!.' Wb®re h,'. had Just passsed an
nothing romantic in this.
Except That the story Opens Well
and She Really Was Not
Like Other Girls.
Mie was not like other girls.
This remark suggests that there Is
H„r °ry .comlng-a a,ory or about
thirty chapters-in which Deborah
gives up the young man because Iter
mother needs her assistance, and the
young man cannot support three per
sons on his salary, and she mourns
Jor him till her dying day. and gives
the younger women excellent advice
and is known as the sweetest, dearest
soul in East Greenwich, R. j.
Not so. Nopee.
'rh* °aI"e of thlfl girl is not Dehor- '
ah. It is Maybelle, and be sure you
spell It just like that. Her mother was
not hard up, because she and a shrewd
legal light and a probate judge have
wrenched sufficient from Maybelle's
pa- And as for the young man
Maybelle has no acquaintance be-
low the taxlcab mark. Yet, she was
not like other girls.
She went on twice a day at a vaude-
house, clad just sufficiently to
keep the police unofficially interested
Everybody said she was a peach. - '
The difference between
other girls was $500
change.
It ts queer what mistakes some peo-
ple do make any way, and the offi-
cers certainly owe this poor fellow an
apology. It happened this way The
officers were raiding a place where the
signs and the doors indicated that the
cup or Bacchus was passed around oc-
casionally. giving joy and happiness to
many a mortal, sweltering under the
rays of the midday sun. In a cupboard
in the kitchen a half pint was found
partly emptied. The officer picked It
up, smelled of it and smiled a smile
of satisfaction. "Here," calmly re-
marked the man of the house "that
is for private use strictly." "is that
SO," said the officer, who continued
his search of the cupboard. Presently
posing serenely behind a sugar bowl
he found another half-pint, this one
being full. "Hello," he said, "some
more for private use." "Well what do
you think of that," exclaimed the sur-
prised owner of the cupboard, "now
how do you suppose that got in there
any way?" "Danged if I know," said
the heartless officer. "I'll just take it
aolng for future reference," and pro-
ceeded to look behind the kitchen
range. His eagle eye espied a sack.
He examined it. "Ha ha, more stuff
fn!ofc,nV"ii7i.USt' revealing a dozen
flasks. What, more of it?" almost
,^"ted the dumb founded landlord,
that fellow who had this place before
moved in must have been a drinker
and a half.
been a drinker
1 wish the dickens he had
taken the vile stuff with him. Do
>ou know I find bottle after bottle of
whiskey all over this house sinee I
I0™" "We'll look further," re-
marked the officer. Under tne floor
™ a" "Pstairs room a case of whiskey
was found, evidently intended for
private use." Its discovery well
nigh caused the man of the house to
nn hi n°x 8UIPrl®ed was h('- threw
that ® ,ua Jn, rlShteous indigation
that such a find should be made in
his house, right among his children
and beneath the feet of his wife the
darling of his heart." "What a wretch
h"w: m-v S°od reputation is being
do**he JVi" ";ire n"at sha <
Who left il h eS 0n that man
th. , P"'- The ol'cers loaded
departure. ' WaS°n &nd t00k ,h"ir
At a meeting of stockholders in the
untry Club, the building committee
was instructed to proceed with the
completion of the club house.
her and
week.—Ex-
hli'Y'.,. Policeman had already
heard the trouble and was on his way
to the scene. Again the reporter
turned back and saw the little woman
atain on her feet, begging the man,
her again. Seeing th'e'la-f"nl reflecting its human interest
in.* ,, Seeing the two men com-
ing, the fellow grabbed
, ^ a care-worn little wom-
—O ian. appealed in vain to the drunkard
to give up the child. A terrific blow
i i-ixrrt ti."- - >".■
ST ,l" f.-mm. m
fT was only
An aged and white-haired
nar-; woman, bent with years n,mi,0i,
on plain canvass that left Its the creature to give up the child
and hauled It HmTthe" tUfdmg &8i°v? ,,1P llyef «' a Pawnee to-hls'"^'.'"^^™ d™e
quw-relling. °®Cer foaad 'hem stlfi, In the costly Tu'rTh" Z"(t".' °'d grandmother
th/re\yas noaques8tion^nWhls mind bm V^'^wa. that story
li'miM <k. -i . . 1
"",o
alone
Ply to be left
was doubly emphasized. "Oh,
Jackson county farmers propose
three day fair this fall.
Ponca Indians will hold a st
dance near Bliss, August 29th.
chartered at
Everybody's Ice Co..
Chickasha.
lohn Archer White, aged twelve
years, stole his fourth horse in JZ
S55J" w,nty wlthln ,hrw> nion,h8
* * *
Miss Cora Wescott, of El Reno
received as bridal present four hun
rounty °f land ln Canadian
First load of Washington county
corn sold at Bartlesville for fiity
!'iat ilW-°Vld throw th* b'« beast into t°hat 'fTcWed' Krandn^'but
ltB"i b.Ut.hWbe? he lald ,lan''s on' hlm
it was tho plea of the little
that he not do
child s voice rang out on the night
air as she kneeled over the prostrate
many form of the old lady. A moment later
ao which caused hlm'familyW ""H' ** ** ^ "tU
to retrace his'^ steps wnhOTt'hu'^ctTm I'The '\J'7 nlR11"8 nK°'
"Yes?" he said to the reporter after L, J Picture- it was like
better1"1 Thev Ir.d 'hsupp08>> " '9 sipat'lon" o?a wre^kjd Lme^a "ovln!: face'wit'f "f "".'i""18 the swollen clflc intent is tn his general disregard
.h^dl&Atr, cast ^ oft for the greater allur 111 ^ ^ ^
Clergyman- Gives Income to Charity.
('anon Hicks, a popular clerical tig
ure in the County of Lincoln, Kng-
land, has announced his intention ot
giving his private income to the poor
"As a socialist," he said, at a recent
labor mass meeting, "and a follower
of one who had not where to lay
his head, I have to consider how far
I am justified In living on unearned
increment from the wealth I happen
o have inherited. It Is a hard prob-
lem, but I Intend to face It."
The canon has since been pressed
to amplify his statement. "I can only
tell you, he says, to inquirers, "that
I am lacing the problem as well as I
can. I am not going to part with my
capital It is understood, however
that he intends to surrender the whole
of the Income from his private wealth
Which is considerable. He has already
made arrangements to sell his motor-
car and part with his carriage and
he will live entirely on his salary
His Private means he will devote to
the alleviation of suffering and want
as it is brought to his notice.
Murderous Lawbreakers.
Every chauffeur who drives his ma-
chine at a dangerous rate through the
streets assumes the possibility of man
Slaughter and must be held responsi-
ble for Ills deeds. Under no circum-
stances has any man a right to make
the highways, in the city or the coun-
try, dangerous. If he does he takes
'be chances of manslaughter; the spe-
reliance
IRON WORKS
Phor" 263- 125 N. B,.r*
Steam, Ga« an« Gasoline Engln*.
overhauled. All kind. „f bollerwor*
«n* machinery repair, promptly
tended to.
When In need of thl. kind of wo v
g|Vf ug a ca()
J. C WILKINSON
Dental Parlors
'06|/2 E. MAIN ST., OVER HICKEV
BROS., PHONE 1154.
$4 TO $5
cents per bushel.
• *
Wichita Beacon:
meant " ^ might ""hav'e nts °' ,'J'e cup
next Mme, too." want t0'
,T"Present time, there has been
next time.'
i T.he won,an had returned from a
vlait out of the city on the early morn-
In the !!' had found her husband
in the rear of the store building
where they made their home, with an-
other woman. She had chlded htm
and was rewarded for her chiding by
' 1beating. But withal his cruelty
when the husband was about to be
^nVi7*1 fr°m hor K,d" and thrown
i brvt" th0,,Rh be was. she
pleaded for him.
thABhfala8,stc,rn law' as lald down in
the books is concerned, the official's
duty was laid out plainly before him
11 was a Question In his mind
Gold Crowns
Porcelain Crown .
Bridge Work
Set Teeth 6 0(>
Upper and Lower Teeth, both... 10.00
Very best Set of Teeth made... 8.00
Upper and Lower, both of the
best Teeth 1600
Gold Fillings up
Silver Fillings _ _ _
Cleaning Ef|fl
Extracting J (J (j
All Work Guaranteed.
Painless Extracting.
Rooms, 107 and 108, Mammoth Bid*.
DR. O. O. SINK
Homeopathic
Physician and Surgeon
Phone 1226
. . , ■' father to come back.
Slstent efforts to ?etuT a"^"; his'^S! Z/d^ °f
father to his fireside finally resulted tion of his awful act-but the creature'
,fs « >nnn deposited the babe
man—h
explained'his "New Jerusalem capita! ^higher°S "ot 'be"'^!^ accomplish
scheme to tho farmers at Shawnee ills // y 'u>p<ilnK hpr plea,
this week. They seemed to liko it i # Judgment, and snap judg-
better than the nTfAJf °ft times the greater wisdom
city to!d him he could. It was a gamble
j -nid he would bet on the doubt of re-
fight'" ' i('t nta' ('eath In a saloon moulded «s a man deposite
But the man-he was like hundreds I "he good'w°fe fo" ass^sUn'th.PermUte<l
most constant follower of evil mm. ti,., k-l,
pan ions. lights went out before assist-
AS he sat through the tragic recital T UeUw^re"^^^ „ h ,
Trl W"r.r sct'n t0 Riisteu on his for the wlf" beater CUre
cheek. The ^ood wife was quick to Thai
him. It Is a very low or a very dan-
gerous type of mind that will take
such chances; and such a man no
matter what his Intentions, is, to all
intents and purposes, a criminal. A
rigorous enforcement of the law
rigorous supervision of chauffeurs
and swift and certain punishment In-
flicted whenever the law is broken,
will deliver the country from the
speed maniacs who have overshad-
I owed its highways for the last two or
note the effect. Wii^ilaKidd™ Int'o'TheTaysTf^Le blue Taws ^d 'yeBr8'"Th# °UUOOk'
- —« --i
lesson brought "home To'L^unfortu fl "'"J1"'"'' he who terrl-' The Pe°P'e known as the Slavs ap
nate husband And the child She si, „n , al" 8trect home in Pear in history north of the Black sea
too-a little tot- seemed to realize the would ll l"!,,!'?"!'*:, delaware about the time of Emperor Trajan,
— - • and begin to be mentioned
some frequency during the
tion. Buojectea to the humiliation ""of puVh'ed8 w^tward^tato^th. ^ .h81!e
was r't" thTh"nal pk',ur,>- The hour J' 'l™t"we '"a"?go' back'to'tii m donlail1' but have nowhere, fare^n
late. The usual 'VonH „..,tho(ls of * accordlng° o KU<!8lUn,rt;'ainrfd po""cal 'ndepend-
iHnrn ' tttc°ra'"8 10 «««« Of the flftppn nr 01
ww— iiiue lot—seemed to roAliyp the • " "evaware
meaning of th«> fight that was hoim n . ?n a JJJ lashing followed by A. D. 110, i
waged between the best of a man and fasten i e*hihltion of the belligerent with sonic
an unconquered resistance to tenipta- be subjected to8 ?h he would sixth centu
tion. '""a he 'UhJected to the humiliation of pushed we
was K.t,Thenau^,,U^00dTh;i^ " "ack"to'tiiose old S ret
mtlePfam!T3yn w^ked^forth in"d '"h f006' 0f "j? flftwn or more sia^lo
swrsSHSSHr awawari M&rarwys
art had be<>n very blood of a confiding heart Croatian and Serbian are of the most
importance
OTE
This is the place to get those
Wall Papers
the papers that will hold their lustre—
in The rich'n«i,oring ^ffecta'^nd V
yogunr8homeWl" b(' m°9t aP"roPr'ate for
An Examination Solicited
Wirfs Paint & Glass Co.
9™ aND BROADWAY.
J. E. ALLEMAND
The Jeweler
" Atatrh2"n-id.,EnKPoT'n8 8 Specialty
At the Owl Urug Store, S E. Main
\
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Russell, U. S. Shawnee Daily Herald. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 37, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 22, 1909, newspaper, August 22, 1909; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc104003/m1/4/?q=coaster: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.