Rogers County Voice (Collinsville, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 29, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 31, 1914 Page: 2 of 4
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The Crusader
(FATHER JONES. Editor
The hottest inn -Catholic paver in America.
Every par ,.,'raph burns. Monthly. 3c a year.
The love of a good woman and tiie organizations is the National ,o clues of: or more, ioc a year. Sample i cent. U pen nr Co., Tea.,
respect of one s fellow men make life American Woman Suffrage Associa- THE CRUSADER. IOLA, KANS Mr. Tom Hickey.
Dec. 9, 1913. , tenant.—Clarence Leathers, in Rebel.
worth living.
lion with headquarters in New Tori,
from which radiate the numerous
THEY DDE HARD.
The Ass. Press (Ass by name and
Ass by nature) sends out to ail the
plate owned press as ’mews” the
following:
WOMEN FAIL AS JURORS.
Judge Criticizes First One in Cali-
fornia.
(Associated Press Dispatch)
— Hailettsriile, Texas.
its Dear Comrade:
I am just 15 years of age. I read
1 i
SEEKS TO
ABOLISH "I
WORRY."
SHOULD
READ -THIS!
• » • •
» • • a * • * ^
COMRADES. THIS JOB PLAN f SHOULD BE KEPT BUSY AND
HERE ARE THE PRICES THAT SHOULD NOT ALLOW IT TO STA .9
IDLE AN' HOUR:
fields of knowledge, making
lines of work. The National Woman presence felt in drama art, relig-
Suffrage Association was formed :n j0!1 aad literature. Do not believe your paper with great interest. I Mrs. W. J Zeh. a Chicago ehild-
May, 1369. and its sole object was to .ha.t social unrest is confined to the am fully aware of the fact that the ten’s leader, has started a move- LETTER HEADS. BUI Heads. Unit Ruled. 7«*4.
secure a sixteenth amendment to the down-trodden, half-fed. submerged ‘land for the landless ani home for meat to abolish the phrase. "I should __ ; 500—*1.75 1,000—$2.59
federation constitution which would 0; humanity, that Jacob Riis the poor” is a magnificient move for worry." She believes it has a bad statements. Unit Ruled, SMsBH*
enfranchise the women of the nation, describes. It is as deep as human freedom. It means the downfall of Influence on the young. Ninety-five Tisrite Bond. Linen luu^b. 500—11.50 1,000—$2.00
Elizabeth Cady 3taatoa was its first $octecy~ and spans the world. The landlordism. children of one club have been asked S2.S0 1.000—$ .« Note Heads, AKzftK.
president and Susan B. Anthony was ,-auses go to the very foundations Never before has there been a to submit words to supplant the Yale Bond. Linen ^Finish-^^ ^ . 5q0—$1.40 1,000—$1.73
on its first executive committee. As 0r the present economic system. No question raised that so entered the phrase
1 there was at this time a division of single individual is to blame for hearts of children; it would
opinion as to how the ballot could that system. As a citizen of the the heart jump and prance to know RESOLUTION'S OF A F.\R.M GIRL. 500—12 25
be secured, another orgai2ation was -ation you are responsible for the the joy that will take the place of
Yale Bond. Line* Finish.
500—$2.25 1,000—$3.00
Mail Order Bond. Linen Finish.
1,000—$3.00
H xmmermi 11 Bond.
CAKDft.
formed in Ohio the folowing Novem- continuance of conditions that cause sorrow that now fills the hearts of That I will make friends with all
Redwood City, Cal., January 17.— per. of which Henry Ward Beecher
The first "women’s grand jury,” so- was first president and Luey Scone
called, in California, was tot a great chairman of the executive committee,
success, in the opinion of Judge This was known as the American
George H. Buck of the Superior Woman Suffrage Association and it
court, who discharged the jury here aimed to secure its object by amend-
yesterday after he received its report ments to the diferent state constitu-
aad saying what he thought of it. tions, which method has since been
Eleven members of the body were found to be tbe most practical. There
women. The court criticised the was a friendly feeling between the
jury for its unfavorable reports on two organizations, however, each al-
county officers, which, he told the ways being willing to aid each other,
jurors, were based on inadequate in 1390 the two bodies united, tak-
knowledge and
the present social unrest.
500—$2.00 1,000-
Crescent Laid Hst
Pink, Fawn, Yetiow.
-$2.50
Commercial Linen.
(Ida Callery,
105 locals and
Ft. Smith.)
50 members-ac-
large iere in good standing January
1st, 1914.
A tabulated report for December
concerned matters tug the name of the National Ameri- j along with local reports blanks went
the many thousand land peons, when the farm animals,
they can say I have a home. When That I will study hard and take _
this happens there will truly be what the county examination and pass it, *D75
the Christian ministers have long if possible.
( been praying for: “A heaven on That I will help take care of the
! earth” but I am truly confident this chickens.
: will not happen until the "lion of That I will help with the genera’ 500—$1.60
! mighty strength has fully devoured housework. Bank Writing,
the elephant, the donk and the mose That I will do a great of gar- 500—$1.60 1,000—$2.00
and chased the monster beast of dening. White Exchange.
That I will have a flower garden 390—$1.50 1,000—1.75
and take good care of the plants. Yellow Exchange.
That I will make good use of the 500—$1.40 1,000—$1.65
Business Cards, Missouri Bristol.
Size—2 !4 x3 %.
500—$1.25 1,000—*1.75
Calling Cards, Ladies' or Gents.'
Regulation size, by mall postpaid.
Linen Wedding Bristol........100—60c
For Typewriter or Mimeograph only. Missouri Bristol, 2 ply........100—50c
Can’t Use Pen and Ink. ! -
1,000—$2.00
ENVELOPED.
capitalism to its place,” which is the
bottomless pita of hell.
If I were standing before my Lord
essentially trival. can Women Suffrage Association, j to each local January lath. If you Socialist because I believe
— Mrs. Stanton was its first president. have not yet received yours, write pure and undefiled doctrine or He
You see it’s this way, vomendon: and Miss Anthony was vice- preev- headquarters. would not have said: "Love thy
understand politics as she’s spoke to- dent at large. In 1392 Mrs. Stanton Comrade Philpot of Grennis sends neighbor as thyself,
day, and they really think that eoun- resigned because of her advanced ja three sets of petitions filled in.
ty officials are on the job for some- age and Miss Anthony succeeded as Comrade Samuel Patton added 90
thin? else than to draw their saiar- president, serving until her resigns- aew members to Ashley County lo-
ies, and to help the party boss who ; tion in 1900. cal daring November and December, probably one-half
put their noses in the public swill Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt sue-- White County local reports 43
trough. You see Jedge, it's ignor- eeeded Miss Anthony as president, members in good standing
ance, they reaily don’t know any serving for four years and resigning Comrade Phil Callery is open for
better, but then Jedge. when they to enter upon a still broader field, dates over Arkansas and Oklahoma, j
are properly labelled Dems and Reps for In 1902, an international meet- Comrade Carrie Turnidge of!
they'll do better we hope, but some, jug was hetd in Washington under ; Springdale will speak Sunday Feb-
llke yourself, say they are built dif- the auspice of the National Ameri-! urary 22d at Argenta.
and Savior I would declare myself a flowers by giving them to the sick,
it is His etc.
Heads, Clover.
1,000—$2.50
A min cannot do so and 3ee his
neighbor’s children in their rags and
he holding them up for one-third or
of their
common sense teaches this.
RULED HEADINGS.
That I will take music lessons and -
try very hard to succeed. Letter
That I will practice bread making 500—$1 75
and try for the prize at the exhibi-
tion in the fall.
That I wiil do anything I can to
labor, make those around me happy —
Ethel R. Taylor, age 14 years, in
Reliance, White, XXX, No. «%.
500—11.50 1,000—12.25
Imperial, While, XXX, So. n%.
500—11.35 1,000—*2.00
Circular, WIillo, No. 0
500—$1.JO 1,000—11,75
Light Weight Manila, No. 8
000—$1.00 1,000—1.50
We guarantee everything in this
list to he a genuine bargain.
Socialist Co-Operative Publishing Co.
Iola, Kansas
Yours for right and justice to the Mail and 3reeze.
ferent from men and won’t ev“r be call Woman Suffrage Association and
able to understand politics If that’s ateps were -agen towards tbe forma-
80, then, as you say, Jedge, there was tion. of an international association
a big mistake made in letting them devoted to the enfranchisement of
into the game at all, and we'uns women. In Berlin In 1904 the Inter-
ghould fight agia this new political national Suffrage Alliance was or-
heresy, and pur. them back into "the ganized and Mrs Catt was elected its
place that God In His infinite wis-
dem, designed them to fill." Get
the preachers on the job before it's
too late.—Geo. D. Coleman.
Robbery, Tyranny and Outrages
in Colorado
unloading and loading into refriger-
ator cars, and the average number of
days to be allowed these cars for
their trip across the continent to
New York. His estimate however,
would be subject to error, because
waters of streams that rause flood
are covered by telegraphic report-
sent by local observers. As this
rain reaches the main channel, the
height of the water in the channe
is determined by successive gagin?
stations. Past records establish how
members added to
Women who desire the ballot hav j
come to realize that nothing can be
first president and she fil's that of-
fice. Rev. Anna Howard Shaw sue- port3 two new
eeeded Mrs. Catt as the president of their local,
the American organization. The Na- ( How many
Association is now a strong federa- cured t0 rhe petitions'? Now is the
tion of state suffrage associations time to actually do something
Comrade Davis of Bigelow reports j
splendid meetings at Havana, Wave-
land and Moore Chapel.
Comrade Jeff Fowler of St Joe
will begin a series of debates with a .charge
preacher, at Texarkana Februrary j rages against the womanhood of long to the militia. 1 do not originate in the United the Mississippi. This plan is fo -
14th. 1 Colorado, the investigarLig commit- The practices of the militia seem ' States. They come to ys. some from lowed all the way down the river an:
Comrade Sanders of Foreman re- j tee of the state federation of labor, to be summed up in the s~atement of the Philippines, Japan, Siberia, Alas- at each point full allowance is mac
the steamship might be delayed by
Denver, Colo., Jan. 26—(Special) hood. It was later shown that these or the cars might meet with an much a height, say of 20 feet at Du-
—In a report substantiating every shots were fired by some of the Accident. i buque, Iowa, will produce at Dave:.-
of robbery, tyranny and out- drunken barrel house bums who be- Storms, like pineapples, as a rule port, another station 80 miles dow
names
‘ Thev say ^a, Canada or the Gul: of Mexico, i for the effects of water from trib 1-
we are the The weather bureau gets cable, tele- j taries, and from additional and loca
graphic of wireless notice of a for-1 rainfall. As a result of these ob-
Starion after station, or serrations in the recent flood, th
These are made up of county organi- che workers of the state.
appointed at the sugestion of Gover- one witness. He said:
| nor Ammons, has demanded the im- ‘to hell with the law;
have you se- j mediate removal of Adjutant General law—military law.' ”
Chase, Judge Advocate Boughton and Striking coal miners were not eign storm,
for Lieutenant E. K. Linderfelt. alone the victims of false arrest an! vessel after vessel reports the peop,e of Cairo had warning a weei
The stories of the outraged vie- imprisonment. A merchant, of twen- storms arri.al in its neighborhood, or ten days in advance. The Pitt.-
•rcomplisbed without organization, zations, which are themselves com- ^ Now is the time for us to demon-; tims are harrowing in their details ty-five years standing, was arrested 80 that the general direction and burgh district can be given only 1
The mother of all the great suffrage pose of local dubs.
strate to the people of the state that j and the straightforward way in in his doorway because he would no: rate of progress can be determined | to 24 hours’ notice, because a flood
we are not content with talking of the which they were told can leave no ’get off the street.” An entire train very nearly. In fact, the arrival of is upon them within 24 hour? after
things we want but are willing to go : doubt of their truth even in the crew were arrested. The railroad some storms can be foretold ten days ja heavy rain storm,
after them and get them. Get busyj minds of the corporation tools who company’s rules and those of the In- la advance. | -
BABY!
j We'll have this tunnel for our pri-
1 vate entrance , and nobody else can
with those petitions. j ran the state government and eon-
How wou.d you like to join the trol most of the newspapers.
. order of school house organizers for! One of these editors, owned by
: the coal operators, said the report
Arkansas?
, Comrade Branstetter speaks at; i2 disgusting and nauseating. It is
What I* a baby? | <*ome in. Just look at the birds hid- Argenta on Feburary Sth and 9th disgusting and nauseating—to the
“About twenty-two inches of coo 1 den in the branches from the storm ^ and cotnrade Goebelon January 28th.: governor of a state who has advo-
Remember the state convention j cated anarchy, to General Chase, who
convenes in Little Rock, Februrary! has permitted his dogs of war to rob
and wriggle, writhe and scream, fill- —kinds
ed with suction and testing appara- Both boys peered excitedly
tus for milk, and automatic alarm 'hrough the opening in the end of
terstate Commerce commission, are , The forecasters watch for the
alike of no importance to the militia, region of iow barometer which is.the:
They will ’ tear up the tracks” or storm center around which the
“take the engine” by force if it suits winds blow. Thi3 whirl or eddy
them to do so. These cases well moves bodily forward with the gen- j
illustrate the puerilities of these an- ®ral eastward drift of about 630
trained officers of the militia; but miles a day in our latitudes. As rhe
as one said, "we must do something lines of equal pressure (isobars
to scare the people.” One man was around the low center crowd closer
SOCIALIST POST CARDS
NOT MANY LEFT
25 POSTPAID, 5 CENTS
IOO POSTPAID. 10 CENTS
TO CLOSE THEM OUT.
SOCIALIST CO-OPERATIVE PUB.
CO.. IOLA. KANSAS
to regulate supply."
“It’s a sweet and tiny treasure,
A torment aud a tease.
It’s an autocrat, an anarchist,
Two awful things to please.
It’s a rest and peace disturber,
With little laughing way3.
It’s a wailing human night alarm,
And terror of your days.”
‘‘The bachelor's horror, the moth-
er's treasure and the despotic tyrant
of the most republican household.''
the tunnel at the birds.
“I don’t see what they can find to
eat,’ said Ned. “Let's go into the
bouse and get them some food, they
must be nearly starving by this
time."
The children ran to the house and
railed to their mother, asking if she
could give them anything for the
cold hungry birds.
“My teacher says beef 3uet is fine
for them in winter, Henry suggest- j iocal Heber Springs last week
and chickadees like nuts and
23rd. Each local Is entitled to one and plunder home3, intimidate strik- arrested because he would not trust together, the winds attending the
delegate for every ten members or ers. to abuse and insult the woman- a militiaman for a pint of whiskey, storm increase in force. The fore-
major fraction thereof in good stand- hood of the strike zone, to trample Another peaceful citizen was arrested caster determines the direction of
TERRE HAUTE, IND., RULE!
FROM PHILADELPHIA.
iQ?- :the constitution of the state and na-
Sebastian County is taking the tion in the dust,
initiative steps necessary to organize it mast be nauseating *nd disgust
the 4th district. ing to the operators who have stood
Comrade J. C. Thomson of Texark- sponsor for most of these acta, who
ana begins his work in this state have established a system of peon-
this month. Advertise his meetings, age in Southern Colorado, who for
The Fidelity Trust Co.. 320-24
irorm and iis | Chestnut street. Philadelphia. do*s
a general banking business, only not
a national bank issue, etc. It's in
He will deliver the goods
Comrade Fergasou reorganized
“A etranger with unspeakable e(U
cheek, that enters a house without a sunflower seeds,
stitch to his back, and is received "^e boys hurried back through
with open arms by every one." the tuanei ’rith ^eir bands full of
“A bold a3serter of the rights of -00<D Clearing away the smai.
free speech.” amount of snow there was under the
“A diminutive specimen of per- evergreen ooughs. they scattered the
Comrade Dora Merts will speak
at Granny Saturday 23th.
Comrade Stanley Clark held a
.-piendid meeting at Bonanza Satur- tested by coroners' juries,
day January 17th. The report reeks with stories of
You can render no greater service the carnivals of debauchery held by
to the working class of Ark , than the militia. It tells of how drunken
On the pretense that he was a burg- movement of t!
lar General Chase himself threat-' velocity.
ened the arrest of the deputy district ’ When weather disturbances are
attorneys. reported, the forecasters know from'tbe east end of Pennsylvania ar !
The report, says- "The pretense experience about how long It take1 Terre Haute is in west, southwest 1
that the militia ha3 been impartial j tie® to reach our Pacific Coast, and Indiana and tbe whole state of Ohio
is absurd. A villianous urine guard then how lone after they will rear between, yet when the street r3. -
may walk the streets with a half 'he Atlantic Coast. For example, if way employees go on strike in Te—*
concealed gun and assault a union a storm coming from Siberia drifts Haute, the Philadelphia Trust C
boy at noon-day, as one guard did eastward around the North Pole anl gets out an Injunction to restra
ful disobeyance of the laws nave Sunday. January 4. while the com- reappears In Alaska, It should appear rhem from stopping work, demand!- ;
beea responsible for the murders of; mlttee was at WaJaenburg, without1-11 Washington and Oregon In about anything or doing anything, but
hundreds of miners, as has been at- interference from the militia, where-(two days; should get to the Great meekly laying down and lettic-- '
as a union man will be rrrested for Lakes in six days aud to the Atlantic public utilitiy officials do ae they d—
being drunk and made by militia- Coast in seven or eight days. please with them Say, Alec, don't
men to work on a coal company ditch Unexpected conditions may delay you think that law. as she's spo-.
years have robbed the very hearts
and souls of the miners, their wives
and children, and who by their will-
verse humanity that could scarcely ■(^3 an(i nut; meats on the ground, securing their signatures to the pe- riilitiamen have frightened children,
be endured if he belonged to any T^11 they tied the suet on the rations that are now in your hands, threatened to shoot a boy of twelve,
one else, but, being our own, is branches and crept back into their after your neighbors with and insulted waitress so that they
a never-failing treasury of delight." ttinnel, where they could see all that these petitions. Explain to them what can no longer get service in the rest-
tney mean and everyone of them will aurants of the strike zone.
EVERGREEN INN.
j happened. Immediately the ground
wa3 covered with chickadees and
other seed-eating birds, while wood-
(By Louise M. Haynes.)
peckers, nuthatches and others, were quarters
be in favor of them. Secure their The evidence of robberies ranges
signatures or send them into head- | from a forced loan of twenty-five snow for as high as five days. The
Quick! Ned! Get up and look out --astinS on the suet ravenously,
the window! The snow has drifted xaa quite a chirping after
in the night so much, It must be ten. tney had eaten a few minutes, as t;ons jn
feet deep out there!” and Henry hop- i.though the birds were doing their
cents; or whiskey “for the captain;” thirteenth amendment to the federal
It is not what you say, but what or a compulsory gift of three dollars; constitution Is as unknown to the
you do that counts. Get those pet:- or a ton of coal, to the downright militia as are other laws "
robbery of *300 and other large The report of the investigating
The kiddies in the cotton and lum- sums of money and valuable jewelry. - committee puts the question of
ped about excitedly.
Ned leaped out of bed and ran to i -or tneir thoughtfulness.
best to thank the kind little boys ber miIjg are a3!jjng yoa t0 do 30me. witnesses
the window.
tell ff how they whether he will serve the coal oper-
thing for them. Roll up a long list of [ were Incarcerated in the jails under ators or the people squarely up to
Ned and Henry kept the food un- signatures to the “Child Labor Bill" | Chase's orders, held for months with- Governor Ammons
“Let's dig a tunnel this morning |d^r tile spruce-tree all winter, and ,An ounce o; preventuive is worth out any charge lodged against them,
to the big spruce-tree," he cried, i rbe *na? shelter made by the a 0f cure". Let us prevent a kept awake five and six days and
“Hooray:" drooping branches, Evergreen Inn repetition of the’ Calumet and Colo., nights by bayonet jabs and cold wa-
Both boys dressed as quickly as, ai-d-! soon grew so l ame that situation by writing on our law books ter in the hope that .driven almost:
possible and were soon through their it!ley Iet the boya come >at° the little tbe »gta[e Mining Board Law". insane, they would confess to crimes
breakfast and ready to go out in the “d ^ould perch on their inactivity is traitorous to the cause as demanded by the dogs of war.
rnow.
“We can start down the path
father shoveled and begin to tunnel
where the drift is so high," Henry
•aid.
The hoys worked fast as the snow
was light, and the tunnel progressed
•apldly.
“What would become of us if it
caved la?" Ned asked.
“I don't believe we would have a
very hard time to dig ouraeives to j
the top, because you see the snow is
rot heavy.” Henry answered.
Suddenly a light came into the,
tunnel at the end where ihey were
digging, and *hrough the opening
they saw the loveliest Little ever-
green room, formed by the drooping
branches of the spruce-tree.
“What a grand play house, Henry!
heads and shoulders ia the most
friendly manner. Henry, who was
9 very good whistler. learned to imi-
tate their notes and they would an-
swer him.
Both boys enjoyed their bird
friends and Evergreen Inc so much
that they left very sorry to see the
-now melt and to have the birds Comrade Phil Callery is now in I damp cement floor of a jail,
leave the old spruce-tree .or the open port gmitb an(j be available for Tbe treatment of a young Slaviu
woo s, buu the^ are Iook.ng forward -i^turg dates on Saturday and 3uniav woman about to become a mother Is
to seeing them return when the
for two days. Drunkn»r3 Is more storms or divert them from the. today is more hog latin than good
common among the militiamen than straight track just as a refrigerator 3ense’ Joe Canr.ou says: "This
among the strikers. Other union car rcaJ' he thrown off its schedule or country’s the hell of a success ” Ye-
men have been arrested without be- he shipped by accident on a wronz .Uncle Joe, just like hell is a suc-
ing guilty of drunkenness and have toad. Some of these storms deplete cess, and such tin horn boodlers and
been compelled by the militia to themselves by running into regions sneaky skates as you aud Bill Taft
work at hauling coal or shoveling of high barometer which are of have Introduced more hell Into ”•
greater magnitude and extent than than we want, and If things can't be
the storm itself. Some of them, how- changed soon, you and Bill will wish
ever, travel completely ar >uad the you were “in hell or some other sea-
wor!,l- port.” Interstate commerce law, and
To keep tab on eo!d waves that federal court jurisdiction, is used to
come into the United States from cover more skullduggery and do
‘.aaada and Alaska, the weather more knavery than most anything
bureau studies the Canadian weath- else and the people are getting “dot
j er reports. England sends reports tired" of it.
- from Iceland, the British Islands and
HOW THE WEATHER BUREAU Continental Europe, and daily r»-
KORLEASTS STORMS. FROST3 ports come from St. Petersburg on
AND FLOODS. the conditions in Russia and Siberia
- The same businese-iike system
t From U. S. Dept, of Agrculture.) «sed ia tracing the track of a storm
FUMIGATING THE SICK-ROOM
snow is deep again.
of the workers. So long as you are; At least one death of a man
leaving undone one thing that you , leaving a widow and two children,
might do for the workers you are! the report says, is directly attribut-
supporting capitalism. utable to an unwarranted arrest on
Comrade Buckner holds a meet- j no charge except that of carrying a
ing at state line Feburary 2nd. He, gun. and to undue exposure to cold floods. Not a few think that the
organized local of seven members at [ for twenty-five days, during which observers must necessarily get their
Taylor last week. : tame the prisoner's bed was on the dam by reading the planers, the stars
and the moon. A3 a natter of fact
the forecaster of the bureau fore-
tells the coming of disturbances in
a basiness-like way. very similar to
that in which a man who has or
If somebody has ben seriously ill
in your borne, and the sick-room
should be fumigated, the bedding
Washington, D C —Many people j ^ applied ia determining the arrival and clothing disinfected, you can
do it for a few cents.
Get thrie bricks
and an iron
SOCIAL UNREST WORLD-WIDE.
Prof. Scott Nearing of University
of Pennsylvania.
The Social unrest has overflowed
the boundaries which ordinarily
separate social science from other
within a radius of one hundred miles
of Fort Smith.
Comrade Callery has just closed
his work as executive secretary of
Schenectady, New ’’’ork. and his lec-
tures on Construertva Socialism wi,i;
be of especial propaganda value.
All communications relative to his This fiendish outrage was committed
dates should be addressed care of! because the militiamen had heard
State Headquaters, Fort Smith. Ark. several shots fired in the neigh'oor-
a typical example of the tyranies
practiced by the militia upon the
womanhood of the state. She was dered a shipment of eocds would es
dragged through the alleys of Trini- timate the-'date of its arrival,
dad, a militiaman's nan! over her Suppose a business man had o
mouth to smother her screams, until dered a carload of pineapples fro-
she fainted and became unconscious, the Hawaiian Islands. He weuM
know the average time it would tak
have an idea that there is something 1 o? frosts.
mysterious and occult about the work 1 Flood forecasts are made in much
rf the weather bureau in forecasting the same way. Information a3 to bucket. Then buy at the drug store
the comine of storms, frosts and the amount of rainfall at the head j nve ounces of potassium permang-
anate and ten ounces of formalde-
hyde.
Now you are ready. Hang bedding
and clothing on a line streichel
across the room. Place strips of wet
paper over window cracks and open-
ings. Lay the three bricks on the
j floor and the bucket on them. Put
ti e permanganate in the bucket and
pour the formaldehyde over It. Then
te sure to leave the room at once,
closing the door tight after you. an4
do not opfen It for at l«Mt tbrc«
hours.
Full Set of MARX
Ni»e CMb-Baod VatanMs Wertfe «1Q
1—$2.50 to You—
the steamer to make the trip to th'
Pacific port, the average time for
To get this special rate you must
subecribe for a share of stock in our
Socialist Co-operative Pabbahiag House,
at a dollar a month for 10 months. Ask
for particulars, book list, catalog ard
order black. If you have Marx's works
or part of them, you can substitute any
ed our other books. Stockholders
40% discount
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Arnold, Grace. Rogers County Voice (Collinsville, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 29, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 31, 1914, newspaper, January 31, 1914; Collinsville, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1078405/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.