Rogers County Voice. (Collinsville, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 20, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 29, 1913 Page: 2 of 4
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The Socialist Pulpit
dom) and the makers of wealth to
he the makers and only administra-
tors of law.
• • •
WHO IS A SOCIALIST?
JIBCS A LABOR AGITATOR.
He announced to the laboring class:
“Come unto me all ye that labour
and are heavy laden and I will give
you rest" (economic security). Re-
lief from the burdens and anxiety
of labour. Imposed by the rich rul-
ing class who "bind heavy burdens
and grievous to be borne, and lay
them on men’s shoulders.” was the
gospel message of Jesus to the poor.
Hence he said plainly that “I am an-
notated of the lord to preach tho
gospel to the poor.” He taught that
those that labor would sometime!
be free from masters and oppressors <
and that this freedom would he ae-1
complished by the poor getting pos-
session of the government—"God has
chosen the poor of the world to i
possess the kingdom." Then the pro-
ducers of wealth will no more be
robbed and impoverished by laws
made by rich men. As the great
antiquarian and historian, C. Os-
borne Ward In "Ancient Lowly"
vol. 2, page 530, said. "Let'us ana-
lize this ancient house in which
the Christians found rest in social-
ism.” .Under co-operation and eco- ( UQ other
notnic mutuality, labor free to enjo> L^aii claim the share of any weaker
Itself, those that labour rested easy [ brother.
and never anxious about a living. | And brand him beggar jn
• * •
JESUS A POLITICAL AGITATOR
WITH GOVERNMENT IN THE
HANDS OF THE POOR.
On page 394 of “Ancient Lowly”
vol. 2, quoting from Renan's Life
of Jesus'" says: "is very pronounced
In the belief that Jesus was a bold
revolutionist and cites the pure
©bionnsm: the reign of the poor is
•t hand, ami the reign of the poor
was the doctrine of Jesus.”
® ©®©®©©@©@@®©© ©! © ©©©©©©©©©®@©© ®
•3} YOUNG SOCIALIST COLUMN j;
® ©
©®® ® © $ @ © © © @©@© ©
TO THE YOUTH.
WOMAN’S COLUMN. ®
©
© ©©©©©©a©©©®©®©
WOMEN VOTERS SEEK KNOWL-
EDGE.
(By Ella Wheeler Wilcox.)
Who is a Socialist? It is the man
Who strives to formulate or aid a
plan
To better earth’s conditions. It is he
Who, having ears to hear and eyes
to see
Is neither deaf nor blind while might
Roughshod, treads down the privi-
leges
And rights which God means for all
men;
The privilege to toil, to breathe pure
air.
To till the fertile soil—The right to
live,
To love, to woo, to wed—
And earn for hungry mouths their
need of bread.
The Socialist Is one who claims no
more
Than his own just share from Na-
ture's generous store.
But that he asks, and asks too that
his won
domain,
To glut a mad, Inordinate lust for
gain.
The Socialist is one who holds the
‘ best
Of all God’s gifts is toil—the second
rest.
He asks that all men learn the sweets
of labor,
And that no Idler fatten on his neigh-
bor.
On page 380 of the same volume That alj men be au0wed their share
we read this: "We quote the new Q( leigure
found Papyri containing the void j^or thousands slave that one may
of Jesus, saved from the dry sand I seek h(> pleasuro.
dunes of the Egyptian Fnyoum by who on the Golden Rule shall dare
Greenfell and Hunt, with their trans- | inslst_
latlon, who think Matthew penned j uphold in him the modern Socialist.
It to his dictation; labled ‘Wor® Of » « •
Jesus," and rendered as follows:
-Jesus saith: "Raise the stone and THE ECONOMIC FOUNDATION OF
there you will find me; cleave tho FREEDOM,
wood and I am there.” It is clear
from these words that Jesus was
preaching to working people, ma-
sons and wood-workers, etc. He
taught that those only who do the
world’s necessary work were wortbJr
to inherit the kingdom and exereiso
political power. Not until then will
distribution. Then “he that would
justice prevail in production and
he eat.” If he is able and willing
and as all want to eat, all will be
willing to work and do their part
Of needed social service.
Eating without earning i3 un-
christian if one is able to work.
Paul did not say he that do«s not
work neither shall he eat, hut "he
that would not work neither should
he eat.” If ne is able and willing
to work but there is no opportunity,
nothing for him to do, he is justified
to have his wants supplied ar.d not
as charity. If what he needs is not
on hand to snply him, then tl^ere
would be something for him to do,
be would have the opportuutiy to
labor to produce what he needs. We
can only assume the condition that
there is plenty already produced to
supply his wants in assuming that
there is nothing for him to do, If
• (By W. W. Passage.)
The Socialist Premise.—The foun-
dation of fundamental justice upon
which the demand for Socialism fs
based is:
1. Our equal and inalienable
right to tho resources of nature as
our common heritage from a common
Creator.
2. Our right to the socially neces-
sary tools of production and distri-
bution. both by reason of our part in
their creation and as our heritage
from the genius and lahor of the
thousands of generations of workers
of the past.
3. Our right to the systematic co-
ordination of our labor with the la-
bor of our fellows, each to receive
of the multiplied product of this
perfected industrial order in propor-
tion to the degree of skill and energy
individually expended.
The Socialist Sequence.—In order
to establish and safeguard this mod-
ern interpretation of the rights of
man, Socialists hold that, just as
through the substitution of public
ownership of law and government, or
political democracy, we have escaped
the tyranny of private owned law
Do you want to help abolish pov-
erty?
Join a Y. P. S. L.
Do you want all young people to
start life’s work on an equal foot-
ing?
Join a Y. P. S. L.
Do you want all people to live a
fuller, better, more joyful life?
Join a Y. P. S. L.
Do you want to educate yourself
in Socialism?
Join a Y. P. S. L.
Do you want to develop yourself
physically and mentally?
Join a Y. P. S. L.
Do you want to enjoy yourself with
others of your class?
Join a Y. P. S. L.
Do you want other young people
to understand Socialism?
Have them join a Y. P. S. L.
* • •
CO-OPERATION.
Greater co-operation ought to ex-
ist between locals of the Socialist
party and the Young People’s So-
cialist Leagues. In many places
each goes about its own affairs never
realizing that the other is in exist-
ence. Many party members think
the leagues have no right to exist
while some members of the Y. P. S.
L. believe they should have absolute-
ly nothing to do with the Socialist
party. This condition or affairs
ought to be abolished.
An agreement ought to be made
between the locals and the leagues
whereby the leagues would be given
representation in the local central
committee of the Socialist party
with a voice but no vote. The re-
port of the Young People’s League
ought to be made a special order of
business of the local. In this way
the local will know what the league
is doing and will be able to render
the proper assistance whenever it is
needed, and to request the help of
the league in Its own work.
As a means of securing further co-
operation the local should have a
representative on the executive com-
mittee of the league with a voice but
no vote. He should act in an ad-
visory capacity and should be some
one interested in the young people’s
work. Such a person would un-
doubtedly prevent the league from
doing many unwise things.
© ©
& YOUNG FOLKS COLUMN.
© ©
... ®®©©®®$®@©©@@ ©
A DOG MOTHERS ELEVEN LIT-
TLE CHICKENS.
ORGANIZATION INFORMATION
There are probably many locals
which would organize young people’s
Socialist leagues but do not know
how to proceed with the work. This
office will be pleased to send infor-
mation on this matter to any per-
son desiring it. Cut this out and mail
it in and instruction will be sent
you.
Socialist Party, ill N. Market street,
Chicago.
Please send me instructions on how-
to organize a Young People's So-
cialist League.
Name ..................................................
Address .............................................
City
State
The recent enfranchisement if
women in several states has brought
about a condition hitherto unknown
in any country, that of the building
up of social centers In every com-
munity for the study of civic, social
and political improvement.
Little did we think five years ago
that the little red school house .would
be transformed into a headquarters
for the study of industrial and poli-
tical conditions by the mothers.
In practically all countries men
have from time to time received a
degree of suffrage, hut never has it
had the effect of producing in them
an insatiable appetite for knowledge
as has the recent enfranchisement of
the women in America. To those
persons and organizations who feared
the woman voter because of her emo-
tionalism and conservatism, this has
been a surprise*
While it is true that women have
been more religious, perhaps, than
men, more humantarian in their iu-
stlncts than men, therefore, from the
standpoint of the politician less apt to
vote for the material interests of a
group or a class, it is also true they
aro less prejudiced and hide-bound
politically than men.
I have yet to hear a woman boast
of voting the republican ticket be-
cause her father did, or voting the
democratic ticket because she was
rocked in a democratic cradle, or
voting the progressive ticket because
her erstwhile leader headed that
ticket.
The non-partisanship of the new
woman voter is a sign of the times
which portends her participation in
the coming revolution. Her thirst
for knowledge will be the means of
awakening her class prejudice, with
that political party which she con-
siders the best expression of her class
interest.
The Socialist party must take ad-
vantage of the openmindedness of
this group of new voters and use ev-
ery opportunity to inform her of the
philosophy and principles of the So-
cialist movement.
• • •
RELATIONS OF SOCIALIST AND
LABOR WOMEN IN NATIONS
GROW STRONGER.
LONDON.—The annual report of
the Women’s International Council
of Socialist and Labor organizations
states that during the year the most
satisfactory relations with labor and
Socialist women in other countries
have become much closer, and ther9
is now a list of correspondents which
includes representatives of every
country in which the women of the
movement are organized.
The Women's International So-
cialist congress, which was to have
taken place this year, was post-
poned until 1914, rather to the re-
lief of the council, which hopes to
be well prepared to take part in the
congress next year. An early inti-
mation of the arrangements is ex-
pected, and the council have sug-
gested that a congress fee should bs
charged, and that the agenda should
FATHER JONES
COLUMN.
LIBERTY
VERSUS PRIVILEGE
NO. FOUR.
I have in former contributions to
Our Toting Folks told many stories
of the intelligent action of dogs.
Some of them I personally knew to
be true. Now in this writing I will
quote from an Iowa newspaper an
account of the strange conduct of a
female dog but for the truthfulness
of which I cannot vouch: It is
stated that Mr. Page Morrison of
Council Bluffs, owns a "setter” dog
that is raising eleven young chicks.
The paper says:
For years the dog has manifested
abnormal love for little chickens.
Three years ago the dog, then a pup-
py, manifested strange fascination
for chickens. A strange infatuation
was mistaken for a canine impulse
to kill and the dog was punished,
fiually the owner figured that the
dog’s continued attempts to make
friends with the chicks had been er-
roneously interpreted. For two years
following the dog gave his undivided
attention to a Rhode Island hen when
she was "setting,” never leaving the
hen night or day, and when tho
chicks were hatched divided the care
of them with the hen. This spring
the hen died one week before the
eggs under her were due to hatch.
The dog was the first to discover the
trouble and by frantic actions called
Mr. Morrison's attention to the trou-
ble.
Little attention was paid to the
dog while the dead hen was being ta-
ken away. When they returned the
dog was trying to keep the eggs
warm and did manage to spread her
body over the nest in such a way as
Let us go back to the times just
before the war of the Revolution
and during the struggle for inde-
pendence from Great Britain and
trace the fight of Liberty versus
Privilege in our countries history.
✓ Let us understand what Free-
masonry was then, and is now.
Freemasonry then and I use the
word then advisedly, as opossed to
now. Freemasonry, as all Masons
who have passed through the Blue
Lodge know, is not in any sense a
political order, but a great school of
moral philosophy, teaching self con-
trol, Independent choice, rational
volition, moral accountability. It
teaches toleration, freedom of con-
science, freedom of expression, free
press, a broad human brotherhood,
that "the great Architect of the Uni-
verse” is the common Father of all
mankind, and all men are, or should
be brothers. That is its teaching to-
day, but English speaking Freema-
sonry, though teaching the same doc-
trines as then, has, like the churca,
that professes to follw the Man of
Nazareth who taught the same
things, fallen into an apostacy.
The French rite or Latin speaking
Masonry has not so apostacised, and
the Scottish Rite does not officially
recognize it, and for this same rea-
its beginning in the Scottish Rite i*»
without which we could not
obtained the help we received froi*
France. But it did more. It threw
there a panic into the political ma-
chine of the church of Rome, and tha
whole force and power of the Jesu-
its became at once active against
the colonies, and their fight against
American ideas has been the great
state secret ever since. In England,
Jesuit spies had been active in tho
lodges of the Scottish rite, and they
at once got busy in the same work
in America.
When Cornwallis surrendered tha
American and French officers or-
ganized, May 10th 1873, the socie-
ty of Cincinatti, of which George
Washington was the first president.
This society had for its object
the holding together of the princi-
ples for which the revolution was
fought.
The conservative and property
holding interests were very adroitly
worked upon until the secret con-
clave called the Consitutional Con-
vention was convened in Philadel-
phia. Patrick Henry of Virginia
who as an enthusiastic mason of
the radical French type, saw and
understood the real meaning of this
convention, refused to take part
in it.
Jefferson, whom the conspirators
feared, was adroitly disposed of by
sending him as minister to Franco,
and Thomas Paine, whose politioi!
writings (who was also a radic :!
French type of Mason) had had ihu
greatest influence In exciting the
American Revolution, was the poli-
tical stormy petrel of the Eighteenth
Century, and .when he understood
the activities of the French Masonic
not to crush the sixteen eggs but to
, * .. America among the more intelligent
cover them as to impart the warmth _ __,,
of her body to the eggs. Food and ancl
water were carried to the dog a few
days until the chicks hatched out.;
At the time Mr. Morrison told the I , , „ . .
. , ... governments of privilege, and ab-
story for publication the dog was *
solutism and the ideas of free govern-
son, namely that It has “kept the order, which unlike the .Scottish rite,
faith.” Whether Freemasonry had was an active political force, he was
1717 and the French Rite in 1725, !easily induced to go to Fiance. Thus
or whether it was then revived or tho , two men most dreaded by the co i-
old order had a rebirth, is not now spirators were disposed of, nnd Pat-
to he ionsidered, but we do know, rick Henry made the mistake of his
that as it spread over Europe and in life in not going right into the thick
of the fight, but this mistake was
its principles began to
filter down among the people and in-
to literature, we see that where in
1717 the whole world was under
due to his not realizing the subtle
forces at work. Had he gone, there’s
little doubt but he would have de-
feated some of the most flagrant of
reactionary things that were put into
the constitution. One thing is most
ment and ■ republicanism were sedi- probable, knowing his character as
tion and heresy, there suddenly we do, he would not have taken the
I came a great activity. Political re- 1 oath of secrecy that made the con-
1 form, invention, discovery and re- | vention a secret conclave. Henry
| volt against oppression became ac-jwas fearless, and as uncorapromis-
tjve tag as Andrew Jackson, and would
Then there was no steam engine have bolted the convention rather
, no railroads, no telegraphs no tele- than have made any compromises,
phones, no steamships, no noihiig Again I say it was the mistake of nla
we now glory in as modern clviliza- i life.
tion, all these have come in the last | Even Washington refused at first,
100 to 120 years. The discovery of for as a Mason he saw what was ta-
Every day we see homes being printing had not had a chance to ef- fended, and when it was proposed to
broken up all around us. The homes i feet the masses as they were illlter- have a king, and they sought to win
of thousands of workers are broken ate. *lim by °Hering him the crown, o s
All these principles of masonry refusal was of a kind that forever
were, and are, in direct, diametrical, squelched that dastardly plan to un-
mothering the little fellows very
tenderly and they “took” to her as
though she was their natural mother.
In this case it would seem that
the mother love wfis so strong that
it prompted this female dog to adopt
the chicks as her babies. She thus
manifested a purer, higher nature
than do many women.—R. A. Dague.
BREAKING UP THE HOME.
forced
it is not produced there is something ' and government imposed by the de- I’rivate Secretary of Mayor of expressed a desire to take part
ment to inaugurate the co-operative i be circulated at least six months be-
commonwealth in which industrial tare the congress,
class divisions, poverty and strife The council considered the ques-
shall give way to fraternity, abund- tion of celebrating a "womens day
ance and universal peace. j but did not think this advisable m
* • * England at present. Instead, they
in a
up every day. Fathers are
to leave their families and go to
distant states to get a job; mothers and catagorically opposite to the to d all he had fought for.
are compelled to leave their babies day openly avowed principles and When the plan of a president for
and earn money in factories or mills doctrines of the church of Rome, life was proposed he and his sta’«
to support
them. Little children, She does not believe or teach tolera- voted against it In fact had not th«
who ought to be in school, have to
go to work to keep the wolf from
the door. v
Low wages, uncertain jobs and the
for him to do and being willing to
•work, the opportunity should be-
long to him to labor without beg-
ging it of another.
To consume without
Is worse than to produce without
consuming. Balzac said: "Morali-
ty and political economy alike unite
in repelling the individual who con- j plish this, it
■umes withont producing.
The Christian movement of
cree of a king, so also must we es-
cape^Sndustria! despotism by substi-
tuting for private ownership of in-
dustry. industrial democracy, or col-
producing lective ownership of industry; in
short, socialize industry just as we
have socialized government.
The Socialist Method.—To accom-
will be necessary tt
Schenectady. N. Y.
Nov. 5, 1913.
Thomas W. Woodrow,
Hobart, Oklahoma.
Dear Comrade:
demonstration which the Independ-
ent Labor party and Fabian society
were planning for the first Sunday in
May. This, however, was post-
poned until next year, when tne
tion. She does teach the union of | notes of the convention been found
the church and state, and that the among the papers of the secretary at-
ehurch should be supreme, and be- ter his death, we would never have
tween the two there is an exact and known what happened, and as it U,
profit system are breaking up the ! complete antagonism at every point, there were words uttered without
homes of working people faster ev-1 Now don't misunderstand the j doubt that would have been more
ery day. facts. Masonry is a school of moral edifying than those that have come
Poverty breaks up a million philosophy, and, at least the Scottish to us. Suffice it to say, that our
homes every year. , rite, as an organization, takes no j Constitution was a long step back-
The security of your home depends 1 concrete or militant action. Any- ward from the principles of the De -
upon your job and that is uncertain | thing that masons as individuals, or laration of Independence, and w is
because your boss controls your job. 1 those who hold to masonic princi- so declared by Jefferson, Franklin,
You are his working slave and he P'es, or in their political form, Amer- and Henry, and even Washington,
throws you out of work to starve ['can ideals do, is an individual mat- always cautious, derlared it to be i
whenever he so desires. i ter. but not so with the church of doubtful experiment, and he yielded
Socialists are organizing the work Rome. The church of Rome through as a compromise to what he saw a.vl
tl eir miltant order of the Jesuits, understood was the organized power
is an international political machine of the property Interests of which he
that has its secret agents in the was himself one.
diplomatic corps of ail the nations,
as the state secretaries of all the na-
tions of Europe well know. But of
this at another time.
Between 1717 and 1776, mason-
ry spread over the American colo-
ing class to own their own mills,
factories, mines, farms and shops so
that every worker will be certain of
a job as long as he wants it.
Read this over. Talk it over with
your friends.—Progressive Worker.
The growth of Socialism depends
i have read with deep interest the [council hopes to be able to take part,
announcement which you enclosed i Mrs. Salter and the secretary rep- ...... ,
tous. Iam always more or less resented the council at a conference to a degree on the^circulauon of this nieSi and gathered into its lodges
Are you helping?
skeptical about the launching of any on "War against War convened b\ PaPer-
ishow the working class the fact and Socialist publication, but if it is tha Independent Labor party and ad-
old method of its exploitation so that properly managed I feel that the field dressed by Norman Angell. The coun- mother of domestic science schools leading men, wd^became the leaven
WWVWWWWA/WWVS^WWV^
In the fight between Liberty aid
Privilege, the Revolution was fongn.
upon the principles of Liberty, the
Constitution was formed to as far
as possible undo its work and ever
since, the principles Involved have
been the bone of contention and the
such men as Washington. Franklin, central state secret.
Dr. Rush. Jefferson, in fact all the , -.--.—
t , . ' I , , . which rnu enntemnlate covevin- 's cil is now actively engaged in pre-1 in America.” Two thousand persons of liberty from which came the idea,
the modern Socialist movement , the workers may become conscious "men jou contemplate coterin., 15 dL ’ . . . . .. ..... ..
Ud me moaern oociansi moveuieui | ciic nuiwcia moj uwumc wuatiuua i
both stand for the democracy of la-! of the conflict of interest between ,°ne whlch is Tpry essential. You paring for a campaign against rail-
bor and the democracy of wealth. I capitalists and non-capitalists and manifest in your thesis submitted r. tarism. and for this purpose are:
And the program of Christianity and also conscious of the necessity for a,*' thorough understanding of o- Issuing a leaflet on war from the
democracy of ' separate political party through cialism from the ethical view point, women’s point of view, which is to
The head of our ticket was de- contain a message from the German
CITIZENS OF TOMORROW.
Out of the 20.000,000 school chtl-
Socialism to secure
•wealth and labor is for those that la
which they may take possession of
bor to possess the government (king- and use all the powers of govern- taated here by the combined fusion ,«omen.
WOODROW’S MONTHLY.
One year. 50 cents.
Send no money, but get this blank filled and for-1 ('lection; A» thin?s considered it was
•ward to the Co-Operative Publishing Company, lola, Kansas a magnificent victorj.
THOMAS W. WOODROW. Wilh best wishes’ 1 reraain’
Fraternally yours.
PHIL GALLERY.
• • •
Chicago. Nov. 7, 1913.
Thos. W. Woodrow,
Hobart, Okla.
Der Sir: 1 first heard of Wood-
row's Magazine yesterday in the
first copy 1 ever saw of The Cn:-
versalist Herald.
I am a reader of the Christian 3o-
in the college auditorium stood and "rebellion against tyranny is ohedi- dren in the United States—
cheered when she arose to speak. ence to God." When the committee A million have fiatfott spinal
A department of home economics ; was appointed in 1776 to draft a curvature or other moderate deform-
first became a part of the agricult ur- declaration of Independence, three, jties serious enough to interfere la
al college in 1874, but It was not un- Masons, Jefferson, Franklin and i some degree with health;
til 1882, when Mrs. Jones came, that Dr. Rush were chosen. The words ; A million have defective hearing;
forces. We elected, however, al Preparing papers on conscription ithis department began its useful ca- that form the cornerstone of Ameri- I Five million have defects of
sheriff, five aldermen and five coun- and militarism which can be lent for reer. It started in one room, with can Ideas, "We hoid these truths ! vision;
tv supervisors. Our vote was in- reading 3i meetings of affiliated or- one teacher, two sewing machines,; to be self etident, that all men are | Six million have adenoids or en-
creased 2,000 over the vote of last ganizations: and und a dozen or more students. Today |created equal, and are endowed by larged tonsils or cervical glands
Organizing a working women's Mrs. Jones saw more than eight [their creator with certain inaiien- needing attention,
peace visit to Germany, to take place hundred young women studyuu, able rights, among which are life' Ten million have defective teeth
early in next year. homemaking in what she character-< liberty and the pursuit of happiness, • interfering with general health
Care Co-Operative Publishing Company. Iola. Kansas.
Dear Comrade: We, the undersigned, agree to pay upon demand, fifty!
MDtl for one year's subscription to “WOODROW'S MONTHLY," it being1
RBferstood that magazine will not be started or call made for the subscrip-
tion money until enough subscriptions huve been pledged to insure its pub-(
lication for at least one year.
NAME. ADDRESS.
FIRST TAUGHT HOME WORK.
ized "the largest school of horn, [and to secure these rights, govern- Five million suffer from malnutri-
economics in the United States.” ments are instituted among men 'tion. in many cases due wholly or In
- The whole country smiled, Mrs. deriving all their just powers from part to some of the foregoing dc-
When Class Was Started at K. S. A. Jones said, when Kansas first an- the consent of the governed.” These feels. (Authority, Dr Thomas H.
C„ in 1882. She Had Only n Doz- nouneed its intention of teaching words are a translation from the Wood, Professor of Physical Educs-
en Pupils—Now There Are Eight housekeeping. And she remembered French masonic author Baron de tion in the Teacher’s College of Col-
Hundred Students.
how girls used to come to her weep- Holbach, showing that Jefferson 'umbia University.)
ing to ask if they might be excused 1 and Franklin and in fact all of the i__
from taking the domestic science masons then, drew c.ieir ideas from
work. She remembered, too, how a
rite.
! few years later they came befo'e
i they were prepared for the work,
MANHATTAN. Kan.—The K.msis
State Agricultural College was the
first school in the United States to
Cialist and am loaded with periodical teach girls to cook and sew. and the
literature, but your platform appeals woman who founded this school was asking eagerly for the instruction,
to me and so I send 50 cents for the,one of the speakers at the celebn- It was then, she said, that people
magazine for ose beginning zz t tion of the fiftieth birthday of the first realized that training for home-
One vear’s subscription free to club raiser, for each club of five. Bend conYse. with the first issue. college. She is Mrs. Nellie Kediie | making was more important than
WOODROWS MONTHLY for one year to the following address as per Sincerely,
9«ur offer tar club of five THOS. G. ROBERTS. M. D. ot auirarnaaie, «is. nwiucui "»• »iui ur»u ian5u«scs anu useless Slim lo r ranee sained tne enthusi- llaws.” Consistency, thou art
‘...... Club Kaiser................................i 814 E. 42d Street. iters introduced Mrs. Jones as “the; knowledge.—Kansas City Star. Ustic support of the French Masons, i jewel in those part*.
i
Fakirs. Some of our “Labes'
the French rather than the Scottish Leaders” are singing that old sirs*
r,te’ ls°ns. "Put good men In office.**
Their bold and radical utterance i “Join your union, pay your dues,
electrified all the liberal element and vote the bosses’ ticket.” (And
of Europe, and gave us Kosktasco, they call It unionism). "Elect go.-l
Pulaski, DeKalb Marquis de La ray- men to office, and send a delegation
me, and a host of masons of Europe of “Labor Leaders" dfftm to tho
Jones, now a widely known writer. Stuffing the minds of their girls Baron Von Steuben. Franklin’s mis- state capital to BEG for good lahoi
of Auburndale. Wis. President Wa- with dead languages and useless sion to France gained the enthusi- laws.” Consistency thou art a rare
iters introduced Mrs. Jones as “the;knowledge.—Kansas City Star.
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Arnold, Grace. Rogers County Voice. (Collinsville, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 20, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 29, 1913, newspaper, November 29, 1913; Collinsville, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1077022/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.