Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1910 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
OKLAHOMA STATE REGISTER
' \ T" ' ' T * Jf '
Oklahoma State Register
Published Every Thurrday by
THE OKLAHOMA PRINTING COMPANY
57 m. DOLPH. Pres.
JOHN GOLOBIE, Set.
itabiished Dec. 17. 1890.
Inc., Dec. 17, 1903.
tered at the Postoffioe at Guthrie, Oklahoma as Second
Class Malt Matter.
Subscription Price jut Year, $1.00
THURSDAY, APRIL, 28, 1910.
JOHN GOLOBIE, EDITOR.
HEX AUK CHEATED KIJIAI, l.\ DIVINE BIGHT
AM) Ol'l'ORTUNITY.
Editor State Register:
In the State Register of April 21st appears an edi-
torial, "Why Impossibility of Socialism," that sounds
very strangely if the writer is one who has been reared
in the cradle of liberty and whose protective covering
has been the Declaration of Independence. I am no
Socialist, but to discredit Socialism by attacking the
one prop of our Republic is preposterous presumption.
Mr. Smithson says, "Our Declaration of Indepen-
dence holds 'that all men are created equal,' a declara-
tion farther from the truth is unimaginable, for men
are In no sense equal; before the law, the altar of the
church, the rulers of the state, mentally or physically,
and it Is against the entire plan of Nature that they
tbould he, etc., etc." Now, II our beloved authors of
the Declaration of Independence had just written: "We
hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are
created equal," and proceed no farther, Mr. Smithson
would have straws to grab, but they made themselves
clear by the words which follow: "that they are en-
dowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights,
that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness," Now It Beems silly to presume that such
men as Payne, Madison and Jefferson thought of equal-
ity In height, breadth, heft, beauty or mental capacity,
but that to each and all equally belongs life, liberty
and the pursuit of happiness, and that such equality
demanded the rights of individuality; hence was called
forth the Republic of America that these God-given
privileges might be secured to the individual; and the
historian Bancroft tells us, "The Constitution estab-
lishes nothing that interferes with equality or indi-
viduality. It knows nothing of differences by descent,
or opinions, of favored classes or legalized religion, or
the political power of property. It leaves the individ-
ual alongside the individual."
Such was the ideal of the new nation, and who can
search his heart and not say it Is a truth that emanates
alone from God who Himself says, "I proclaim liberty
to all."
We, however, concede that through the influence of
decadent religion, law-shielded predatory wealth and
corporation that Truth
"Hath been chained by the despot Oppression,
Freedom enthralled by the fetters of Lust,
Justice—gold hampered—cries out at confession;
Right is a slave with her face In the dust.
Now, according to Mr. Smlthson's argument this de-
plorable condition is inevitable,—therefore just—and
if we are weaklings, poor, distressed and suffering with
Hook-worms, our duty is to kiss (aye, and vote for)
the rod that smites, because since the beginning
wicked men. ferocious beasts and ravenous fishes haV«
devoured one another
How many realize that such argument is becoming
popular in this country, and even among our states-
men we have but a handful left who, regardless of
political parties, are like Indiana's idolized Beveridge
"Americans first," believing implicitly in the ideal of
our forefathers—equality of men—and are working
tirelessly and unselfishly to preserve the same.
The voters of this country should seek enlight-
ment and go searching (By fruits are they known) for
the "American first" candidates for office, and when
found, regardless of parties, support them with
"hand and heart" remembering—
"They are slaves who dare not be
In the right with two or three."
BIB ME> IN CONGRESS,
Congressman McGuire desires to assist the repub-
licans win the state from the democrats.
There have been in the lower house of Congress,
that the country by natural selection, felt were too
large to longer remain there and that it was fit they
should be transferred to the upper house of larger
opportunities. If Mr. McGuire were of such stature of
overwhelming statesmanship, he could materially assist
the republican party of this state in carrying the legis-
lature in order that there might be a republican United
States Senator sent to Washington in place of the pres-
ent democratic representatives. Mr. McGuire has been
eight years in Congress—long enough to have tried his
metal—and if he could now overshadow Senators Ow-
en and Gore by his transcendent ability, it would na-
turally argue that the democratic party in Oklahoma
should be retired at least as far as its representation
in Congress is concerned.
With a republican congress and a republican nation-
al administration behind him, Mr. McGuire had. and
has, opportunities to have made himself the master-
spirit not only of the republican party of Oklahoma,
but of Oklahoma—not by machine tactics, but by ser-
vices performed in Congress. This he has signally
failed, and is today placing the party in a position of
having the democratic representation in Congress
eclipse the republican.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
KEGISTEK OF DEEDS.
I hereby announce as a candidate
for republican renomination for reg-
ister of deeds of Logan county, subject
to the primaries August 2nd, 1910.
W. E. McKEAN,
Marshall, Okla.
REGISTER OI' DEKDS
I hereby announce myself a candi-
date for Register of Deeds of Logan
County, subject to the Republican pri-
maries, August, 2, 1910.
C. R. YOUNG,
Bear Creek Township.
FOR REGISTER OK DEEDS
I hereby announce as a candidate
for the office of Register of Deeds of
Logan County, subject to the will of
the republican voters, at the Primaries
August 2, 1910.
ELMORE E. McGINLEY.
FOR REGISTER OF DEEDS.
y>e are authorized to announce C,
R. Young, of Bear Creek township, as
a Republican candidate fur Register
of Deeds of Logan county, subject to
the Republican primary.
FOR COUNTY CLERK
I hereby announce as a candidate
for republican nom.nation for county
clerk of Logan County, subject to tiie
Danville, Illinois was a natural place for elephants P^aries, August 2nd, 191U,
to turn loose on a rampage.
ROOSEVELT AND THE STANDPATTERS.
They say that Roosevelt makes campaign speeches
in the interest of returning a republican congress, af-
ter the nominations are made.
Let's see. Will he make speeches for the progres-
sives or standpatters? It will be remembered that those
who are now standpatters were largely against him
when he was in office. It is sure they were against
his renomination or the man he wanted.
Now, If it is thought necessary to go he will go into
the field to save the republican party, it can be assured
that it will be along the line of the Roosevelt poli-
cies, not along the line of the policies that has made
certain republican districts so doubtful that they have
to have Roosevelt redeem them.
And let's see how the ground lays in Oklahoma.
Will Roosevelt stand for the McGuire machine republi-
canism that in his day vilified him and tried to beat
his successor in the Chicago convention, or the true
friends of the Roosevelt policies and progress of the
country?
t HAS. OLSON,
Coyle, Okla.
| COUNTY ATTORNEY
I 1 hereby announce injraeii a candi-
date ror County Attorney 01 Logan
County, subject to the republican
primaries, August «, luiu.
JOHN ADAMS,
i .H lKiE OF SU'EKIOK COURT
' I hereby anounce as a candidate
for judge of tne Superior court of
Logan tounty, subject to the will of
tub republican voters, at tne prinia-
commonplace, every day qualities and
virtues.
Such ordinary, every day qualities in-
clude the will and the power to work,
to tight at need, and to have plenty of
healthy children. The need that the aver
age man shall work is so obvious, as
hardly warrant insistence. There are
few people in every eountry so born
that they can lead lives of leisure. These
fill a useful function if they make it evi
dent that leisure does not mean idleness
for some of the most valuable work
needed by civilization is essentially non
renumerative in its character, and of
course the people who do this work
should in a large part be drawn from
those to whom renumeration is an ob
Ject of indifference. But the average
man must earn his own livelihood,
should be trained to do so, and he should
be trained to feel that he occupies a
contemptible position if he does not do
so; that he is not an object of envy if
he is idle, at whichever end of th& so-
cial scale he stands, but an object of
contempt, an object of derision.
Stork Still a Favorite.
Finally, even mors important than
ability to work, even more important
than ability to fight at need, is to re-
member tlvit the chief blessings of any
nation is that it shall leave Its seed to
Inherit the land. It was the crown of
blessings In Biblical times; and it is the
crown of blessings now. The greatest of
all curses Is the curse of sterility, and
the severest of all condemnations should
be visited upon wilful sterility. The first
essential in any civilization is that the
man and the woman shall be father and
mother of healthy children, so that the
race shall increase and not decrease. If
this is not so, if through no fault of the
society there is failure to increase, it is
a great misfortune. If the failure is
due to deliberate and willful fault, then
it Is not merely a misfortune, it is one
of those crimes of ease and self-indulgen-
ce. of shrinking from pain and effort and
risk, which in the long run natures pun-
If
! l ies, August 2, 1910.
S. S. LAWRENCE, ishes more heavily than any othc
POR~~SH£KlFF j we of the great republics, if we, the free
| I hereby announce as a candidate P*'orle who claim to have emancipated
for lepubucan nomination for tiner lit
THE PAST AS WARM NO OF THE FUTI'RE
Some editors warn the public not to go after new
fangled ideas, and back up the warning by confessing
that a few years ago they went off after free silver
themselves and know how foolish it is to go off half-
cocked.
But has it ever occurred to them that they have
established a reason by their self-confession that th^ir
adivce now is no safer than whrti they espoused the
frea silver idea? The men whom they are trying to
warn were probably gold-standard men tvhen ndJv
claiming leadership, as then, wrote books on free silver.
OCR NEIGHBORS. THE CREATCRES OF NATURE
Man always destroys before he appreciates, This
has been the history of the rise of barbarians ovdr
civilized races, and the dominion of natural forces. It
j is in the act of destruction that h? learns to appreciate.
With the increase of population and modern methods
of destruction, in America, all wild life is about to be
exterminated. Yet what would man Jo were all ani-
mal and bird life destroyed?
It would seem we should begin to consider the few
animals left, our real friends and provide for and pro-
tect. The difference between domestication and the
state of nature is fear. Were the birds of the fields
and forests not afraid of us, they would be as the
barnyard fowl. ROstand has made, they say, a won-
derful barnyard comedy out of his Chantacler; but what
could not one do with the coming and going of the
birds in the spring and fall, and their life beside us
summer and winter. Why cannot we consider them as
our intelligent friends and neighbors, the same as
of Logan County, subject to the pri-
maries, August A 1010.
L. D. MUXLOW.
JC1IGE OF SITERIOR COCRl
l nereby announce myself a candi-
date tor Juage ot Suiierior Court of
Logan county, subject to tne Republi-
can primaries, August 2, 1910.
V\ ILL H. CHAPPLE.
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
I hereby announce as a candidate
for County Commissioner of the First
j District of Logan County, subject to
I tne will of me republican voters at
tne primaries, August 2, 1910.
&L> OBERHOLZER.
FOR ItE l'RE SE \ T A TI YE FOR
SECOND III,STRICT
I hereby announce as a candidate
for republican nomination tor Re-
presentative subject to tne pr.maries
j August 2d', 1910.
O. L, BROOKS.
FOR REPRESENTATIVE
| 1 hereby announce niyseit a can-
[ didate tor Representative of second
district, subject to tne republican pri-
I manes, August 2, liHO.
J. S. SHEARER.
FOR SHERIFF
1 hereby announce as a cand.date
for the oilice of sheriff of ixigan Coun-
ty, subject to the w.ll of tne republi-
can voters, at the Primaries August
2, 1910.
J O HN MA H ONEY
FOR SHERIFF.
I hereby announce ns a candidate
for republican renomination for sheriff
\\. H. MITCHELL .... I
August 2nd., 1910.
FOR ( Or VI Y COMMISSI<>NER
I hereby announce myself a candi-
date for county commissioner for sec-
ond district of Logan county, sub-
ject to the Republican primaries, Au-
gust 2nd., 1910.
C. R. YOUNG
Dear ('reek Township
urselves from the thraldom of wrong
jind error, bring clown on our heads the
curse that comes upon the willfully bar-
ren, then it will be an idlp waste of
breath to prattle of our achievements, to
boast of all that we have done. No re-
finement of ife. no delicacy of taste, no
material process, no sordid heaping up
of riches, no sensuous development of
art and literature can in any compen-
sate for the loss of the great fundament-
al virtues; and of these is the race's
power to perpetuate tho race.
Character must show itself in the
man's performance both of the duty he
owes himself and of the duty he owes
the state. The man's foremost duty is
owed to himself and his family; and he
can do this duty only by earning money,
by providing: what is esential to mater-
ial well being: it is only after this has
been done that he can hope to build a
higher superstructure on the solid ma
WHAT
OUR GUARANTEE
MEANS.
It means you will get the best
Dental work at the most reason-
able prices.
That any defect which migh
develop will be corrected prompt-
y and cheerfully.
Our prices always lowest for
best work.
CROWNS: Best 22k. Gold,*$4.00 and *$5.00
BRIDGE WORK: $4.00:andJ$5.00.
WHITE CROWNS: $4.00.
SILVER FILLINGS: 50c
PLATES:". $5.00.
STAR
DENTISTS
or 1st. and Okla. Ave. Phone 459
Over Houston's Hardware Store.
It's the world's Best
None has ever made a salve, oint-
ment or balm to compare with Bucli-
Ien's Arnica Salve. It's the one per-
fect healer of cuts, corns, burns,
bruises, sores, scalds, boils, ulcers,
eczema, salt rheum, for sore eyes,
cold sores, chapped hands, or sprains,
it's supreme. Infallible for piles. Only
25c at Eagle Drug Store.
First Published in Oklahoma State Reg-
ister. Thursday, April 28, 1910.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In the mutter of the estate of A, TV
MeCandless, late of the town of Marshall,
County of Logan, state of Oklahoma, de-
ceased.
All persons having claims against said
A. W. Mc Candless, deceased, are re-
quired to exhibit the same with the nec-
essary vouchers to the undersigned, duly
appointed and qualified administratrix of
the estate of said deceased, at her resi-
dence near Marshall, in the county of
Logan and state of Oklahoma, and that
four months after the first publication of
tills notice has been limited by order of
the caunty court of said Logan County,
terlal foundation: It is only after this as thp time for creditors of said deceased
xhiblt and present their claims
igainst said estate.
Dated the 26th day of April, 1910.
MARGARET MeCANDLESS,
Administratrix
has been done that he can help in move-
ments for the nation.
Mere Wealth no Asset.
on this point, while not merely acknow- j C. SMITH,
ledging but insiting upon the fact that Attorney.
there must be a basis of material well n,.i"!7™u T~! ™
being for the Individual as phasl, Insist.
that this material well being represents) NOTICE TO CREDITORS
nothing but the foundation, and that the matter of the estate of George
foundation though indispensable.' is Ok!
worthless unless upon It is raised the lahoma, deceased.
superstructure of a higher life. That is All persons having claims against said
why I decline to recognize the mere George W. Parker, deceased, are require#
multimillionaire, the man of mere wealth tf> tllP same, with the necessary
as an asset of value to any eountry; and/p^ed* and 'JillESTaSW™£r'Tf
especially as not an asset to my own 'said deceasfd. at Seward, In the County
eountry. If he has earned or uses his T^ogan and State of Oklahoma, and
wealth in a way that makes him of real f,i"L™onths af«Br the first publica-
MRS. C. W.
HUNTINGTON,
Luther. Oklahoma.
ourselves, instead of as enemies to be cheated abused* I i h„,.
- l"roLt *■ """Ben j hereby annouue<
and slaughtered' * - - -
COMMON < 0\SI II VIIOl S\KSS
All the tributes paid Governor Hughes in his ele-
vation to the Supreme Court of the United States are
to his public integrity..
Do those who accentuate this special virtue see the
implication of the revere-that it is rare where a man
in public office has tile resisting power to turn from
common honesty and give way to power expressed by
the exploiting corporate interests?
It is an awful thing if it is true that no man has
the courage to refuse to shade his reasoning powers In
the Interest of the rich.
f-ssity
Are they not more beautiful and
pleasurable than the flowers even? Are they not en-
titled to a part of each season's bounty of nature,
Whether prepared by us or themselves? Are they not
a part and parcel of the scheme of life, and both in
the known and unknown ways of value and n
to us?
The day will come when greater punishment will be
meted out to him who abuses these psychies of the air,
these choristers of the wood and dale, these beautiful
denizens of a larger visible world than ourselves, who
change with the summer and winter solstice with a
mysterous power that we envv.
a candidate
for the office of sheriff of Logan coun-
ty. subject to the will of the republi-
can vot?rs, at the Primaries August
2, 1910.
_ FRED .MADDEN
DISTRICT CLEliK
i hereby announce as a candidate
for the office of District Clerk of Lo-
gan county, subject to the will of
the republican voters, at the Primaries
August 2, 1'JIO.
CHAS. H. GRISWOLD
Did Mr. Hearst Haskalllze his praise of Taft?
MARItV EAKLY—AMI OFTEN
The Opinion of an English Writer
Has of American (lirls.
New \ork, April 16.—Mrs. Desmond
Humphreys, the English novelist who
Writes under the name of Rita, was
Interviewed today by a woman re-
porter.
I have walk il on Fifth Avenue,"
the novelist sild. „i„o ...i.v.
The courage of the Socialists is s>"own in helping
the colored brother in toil in filing an initiative atalnst
the "Grandfather Clause."
"Well, now,
Thr e
«... i 50U 'lo things in the "You have been r°nitnir
men ? Mr8' HumIlhr'<vs com- Weeks " said the renorter
vice h'ereMs an'y "''T T** ' r"! "°h vou'cannot"™ me"starts on
nere is an example of what I Mrs. Glvn " Mrs Hnmnhrevo milo*
astttn^rnH^,v ztiii
ou a per sonal JitA,
again and
married.
borately for the Htre,t-I mean for
walking. Usually toilettes such as
the New York woman wears to walk
in on an afternoon the Paris or Lon-
don woman would only ujo in her
brougham or victoria.
It is not the lack of simplicity ex-
actly," and Mrs. Humphreys smooth-
her own wide featlur boa, "it is the
bright colors and extremes the Ameri-
can woman wears.
"It is that sort of thing." The
novelist explained as Bhe leveled her
lorncttea upon a picturesque figure
that swept toward the telephone
booths. ' Really, you Americans have
a most extraordinary knack of (lath-
es.
Roosevelt Crowns His Career.
of Chaiiemange when the lords of the
Fiankisn hout were stricken at Ronces-
Let those who have, keep, let those
-io have not, strive to attain, a high
&!«*■ of cultivation and acholarshi]
L-t let us remember that these stand
cond to certain other things. There is
sed ot a sound body, and and even
moie need 01 a sound mind and above
stando 11 aracter—the sum o* those
ies w'lK r we mean when we
oi & man's force and courage, of
>od failh uiio sense of honor I bo
in exercise for the body, always
J<-d that we keep in mind that phy-
development is a means and not
End. I believe, of course, in giving
j to all the people a good education. But
, tjon of this notice has been limited"by
benefit, of real use—and such is often the order of the County Court of said T^ogari
ase—why, then he does become an asset Gounty as tho time for creditors of salt)'
of worth. But it is the way In which it Pre,,,,nt the'r
has been earned or used, and not the I Dated the 2*th dav of April Win
mere fact of weath, that entitles him to WILLIAM S. PARKER,
the credit. There Is need in business as' Administrator.
in most othed forms of human activity, First Published in Oklahoma State neK-
of the great guiding, intelligences. Their ister. Thursday. April 28. 1910.
places cannot be supplied by any num- i PUBLICATION NOTICE—District Court
her of lesser Intelil^nces. it is a good that^hT hfs'ren^ued'a^^eVanH^n
thing that they should have ample recog- "an action now pending In the District
nition, ample reward. But we must not ^^"rt of "Logan County, In Oklahoma
transfer our admiration to the reward in- 1 oeo^'e" Xh!!™ ?owe,ns 'f Plaintiff and
ueorge wcnumacker Is defendant and
stead of to the deed rewarded; and If that he must answer the petition of said
what should be the reward exists with- plaintiff, filed In said court In said actioft
out the service having been rendered, ' of ^u,v- 1910.
,. i t ti in , . said petition will be taken as true-
then admiration will come only from and Judgment rendered against said de?
those who are mean tff soul. The truth fondant quieting the title to the jiortt*
is that, after a certain measure of tan- I Section 32, township 16,
Klble material suecess or reword has been w1!llam° BowenV' Stiff, ^accordingly
achieved, the question of increasing it as prayed for in said petition.
becomes of constantly less importance! Dated April 26, 1910.
compared to other things that can be /qoqi\
<u# 1* i ii.it t i . CWk District Court-
in life, it is a bad thing for a na- By WALTER T. WARREN, Deputy.
done
tion to raise and to admire a false stand-
ard of success; and there can be no fal-
ser standard than that set by the deifica-
tion of material well being in and for
itself. The man who, for any cause for
which he is himself accountable, has
PAT'L WILLIAMS,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
lical
nie as though a lot of you are
wasting your time.
yerv
•led
most
amazing thing. You meet a girl and
. -v0 fancy she is only about sixteen—
Uh, you waste the things that do «'* • positively, she Is dress d like
roalter and waste your time striving , a eirl of sixteen—and then you find
foi things'that do not. ^ | she Is married. In New York any
"This great city, with an its luxury j girl unde>' -2 has been married once
much of it unnecessary, uuld not af- i "i"1 "ftPr ,,mt—an" indefinite numb-r
ford me room with big widows and of
plenty of sunshine. Oh, dear no ' ls not sentiment, that lg hv-
wonder I feel s0 ill! and what shock- Now tha' ' think of it, I am
ing books you read, and what dread- y mos afrnili of America s gen-
ful plays you go to j fniont is hysteria. You children
"I..am eom'fencing to believe you | y0^„ VA„ „
she was
are very moral. All moral people are 1 aE„ed >0" 8
salacious. The books and plavs you
Americans fairly gobble are so dread-
fully salacious I am beginning to be-
lleve that you have morals."
"Well, of course not," asserted Mrs
Humphreys. "I am sick of the' sub-
ject. Positively I will not answer
another word after that quest: a "
First Published in Oklahoma State Reg-
ister. Thursday, April 28. 1910.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
I Tn the matter of the estate of Lydi?
failed to support himself and those for j Siint'y'™l''r^n state6oVoklSho^SrdS-
whom he is responsible, ought to fe
that he has fallen lamentably short in
his prime duty. But the man who, hav-
ing far surpassel the limit of providing' vouchers
for the wants both of body and mind, I pointed and
of himself and those depending upon him
A1 persons having claims against said
Lydla E. Pfrimner, deceased are requited
to exhibit th«i same with the necessary
"he undersigned, duly ap*
inalified administrator of
the estate of said deceased, at Crescent,
In the county of Logan and State of Ok-
iueation must contain much besid-
es book learning in order to be really
good. We must ever remember that nu
keenness and subtleness of intellect, no
polish, no cleverness, in any way make
up for the lack of solid qualities. Self-
restraint, self-mastery, common sense,
the power of accepting individual respon-
sibility and yet of acting in conjunction
with others, courage and resolution—
these are the qualities which mark a
masterful people. Without them no peo-
ple can control itself, save from being
controlled from the outside. I speak
to a brilliant assemblage; 1 speak in a
great university which represents the
flower ot the highest intellectual devel-
opment'; I pay all homage to intellect.
and to elaborate and specialized training
of the Intellect; and yet I know I shall
have the assent of all of you present
when I add that more important still are velop lnt0 one of the kast attractive
Continued on page eiget
then piles up a great fortune, for the lahoma, and that four months after the
acquisition or retention of which he re- first publication of this notice has been
turns no corresponding benefit to th«' Halted by order of the county court of
. , ,, .< ,, w said Logan county, as the time for cred-
natlon as a whole, should himself be j ,tora of gal(1 (l0f.PaH0(1 to exhibit and
made to feel that so far from being a present their claims against said estate,
desirable, he is an unworthy, citizen of 1 Dated the 28th day of April. 1910.
the community, that he Is to he neither! A(Unln,gtrator 0/' UJ0 Lvdl*
admired nor envjed; that his right i<i. r. pfrimner. deceosed.
thinking fellow countrymen put him low P- H. McOUIRE, H. M. JEFFERSON,
in the scale of citizenship and leave him] Atorneys.
to be consoled by the admiration of those . T)iil ,. . . . ~ , , „
. . # . , I'lrst Published In Oklahoma State Ree-
whose level of purpose Is even lower . Ister, Thursdav. Anril 28, 1910
than his own. NOTICE.
In fact, It Is essential to good citizen- ' . of Logan Coun-
f Oklahoma.
State
Martha J. Johnson, plaintiff.
ship clearly to understand that there are
certain qualties which we in a dema-1
cracy are prone to admire In and of Albert Johnson, defendant.
themselves, which ought by rights to HtaVof Okfahoma?1^1 °f L°Knn r°untV>
Judged, admirable or the reverse solely j ' The said defendant. Albert Johnson will
from the standpoint of the use made ■ of i take notice that he has been sued In the
them. District <^nurt of Logan County, for
Dinaer of Oratorv divorce, alleging abandonment and non-
Danger or oratory. support, and that the said petition of
Foremost among these I, should In- 1 Martha J Johnson alleges that there was
• lude two very dlstinrt gifts—the gift of P° l'®U8R oxcuse therefor, and that un-
If'ss the said petition Is answered on or
before the 8th day of June. 1910, the
money making and tho gift of oratory.
Money making, the money touch, T have
spoke of above. It is a quality which
In a moderate degree Is essential. It may
be useful when developed to a very great
degree, but only if accompanied and coo-
trolled, by other qualities; and without
such control the possessor tends to de-
.-Hid petition will be taken as true and
the said paintitT will be granted a judg-
ment as prayed for in her petition and
a divorc granted to become absolute
"Ix months from the date of tho said
decree.
l «-al) C. IT. GRISWOLD,
Clerk of tho District Court of I,o-
gan County.
By WALTER T. WARREN, Deputy.
K I. SADDLER,
Attorney for plaintiff.
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1910, newspaper, April 28, 1910; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc112699/m1/4/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.