The Yale Democrat. (Yale, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 31, 1918 Page: 3 of 8
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^REGISTRATION QF GERMAN ALIEN ENEMIES.
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I0CENTS
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NATIONAL FORCES AWAIT*1***■■*«*»*»*.
SHIPS FOR TRANSPORTA-
4»T>JTjO«toB»*«Lo»46n:; wav TJUkied xaBfrin
Hjby,eJ*(Dtr*ti*p «H»(*4VSh»lei*^ »ffJ%flut7.
HALF A MILLION ARE THER^|gfe^f
_ . -h. Pntlrm On tm^hmo»€ <h*gbti ftHtfr eeden
••cretary Baker Reveals That Entire , were-, killed tand 160 injured.
Firat Draft Is Ready For 8erv- ' .Iffl®
Ice As Soon ^e Ships , 4or 'wbunaetL’l'n li6ndbfo'’e*c"epti^or tiife
Can Carry them r"(!Wtlt! W%» pifWoil'1 and^lW‘!ol
_ A seven.1 The material damage wha:iiot
Washington.—-AmeVlca will have aatyRfftffOft ;: v 1 il.::-' r, hir*.i!:«v
army of half a million men In Franca L P®rm,W.
•arly this year with a million morej w^H tour or
trained and equipped ready to follow theft <>art dn t^e flrst two ifeM*. It to]
.. nulckly as ships can be provided^ announced offlctaU-y. -<t)ne-.of the rald-|
to carry them—and the outlook fort drrqpkagod. Inthaseertiyi aUeqkpene-|
•hips is not unpromising. , trated as far as the city. i
Secretary Baker gl»«
ce^.MiWV tTtereafter between the hours of 6 a. ro. ana 5 P- v
Including t*e nth day or February. 1918. at 8 o clock, p. m.
THE PLACE OF REGISTRATION.
sunwsoiool
■Lesson
lEnnei
CEREAL CffiP
' > v
areas
as a.s:
at the.
dgpflteluttice.
* -SUGGESTIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS TO REGISTRANTS.
Hiiah' registrant Is required to furnish four unmounted photographs or
Wo^r^hoLmpL'Bhould^e^e^by th entrant across
ijibpk (he photographs, so as
-* >V tr
« ; *
|S«AfpKupte^a38 « otoeure* the*features,*Tf "the appU-
: 'Atep,?orrmk of registration affidavit
tUm to the nluonTnd to‘"the“ world'^M **--
i 0 atotpiTipni before • the BGQftt# ' fi&EQGS fnoin• a height jofc.,10*000 feot.f
military committee, baling much that All 11**0--of the or gw * era .burned to* su|||||||||||||||||||||!|||||lllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIH|IIIII||IIHI|I|^
until now has been carefully guarded. d^h. An WW* tyasj! | I
with the army's military secrets, In ffistfc S -£ ^ -
answering charges that the govern- lhlfder Ovftr the swtfc. All the »ntisn. ^ V t/Vf^ =
m.„ h,. brohen dow„ preparing ^| O M LV 1
*He spoke extemporaneously, begin-1, 9f. live^isliwj M *™c$j | TL 7 ^ -T
n* with details of the mammoth ; w»s bepn,,b^ = l\ PI A) S ^
hi rr
bac
the
F to bv the rc-Kistrant In tho presence of and before the
ffir who will nil In the description of the registrant ami
ftalilK of the flbKcr prints and the attaching of the photo^aphs^
ffrant cannot write, he must make his mark In the s'sykture
uiaee and affixes left thumb print in the space provided opposite the
^oTW a'iSer prlptlng is a method of identification and follow^ the practice
SH.f'£«? .ss.57.e- ni' aaw.5as.hjas;
registration officer.
(By B. O. SELLERS. Acting Director of ,
s&rsayffaasr “ ““ u°*’ ■0ne of tR%*Hver1$VMt"1
(Copyright, 1H7. We»tfrn Newspaper Union.) | The CCrCfU fliop. ^)f , W*Ktern. Canada
for 1917 \jm|L the most valuable one
ever harvested; the returns from all
classes of IWAs^stbCk have beon equally
THE SABBATH. I satisfactory. 4Ehe wool .QUp was not
I only greater than In spy prevlpus year,
! but the price obt'amed was double that
LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 3
JESUS LORD
LESSON TEXT—Mnrk 2:1S-S;6.
golden TEXT-The son of man la 0f jOj0> whfA,h' lh‘ turn war almost
Lord even of the Sabbath.—Mark f:28.
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL FOR
TEACHERS—Ex. 20.8-11; Isa. 58:18, 14;
Nell. 13:15-22; Matt. 12:1-8; Luke 4:16; AeU
20:7: I Cor. 16:1. 2: Col. 2:16, 17.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Jesus and the Sab-
bath day. ^ _ .
MEMORY VERSE—Remember the Sab-
bath day. to keep it holy.-Ex. 20:8.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Jesus and the Sabbatn.
I MEMORY VER8E—Ex. 20:8-11.
| INTERMEDIATE, SENIOR AND
I ADULT TOPIC—Our day of rest and wor-
ship.
oT^lldlTan army*of*a^mUHon |'tS d^n^^^^ed^ g
«nd a half, answering such complaints ; »y Jj? =
of inefficiency as were cited by Sen- thsimghl of W»«n .4AT ^
•tor Chamberlain In his recent speech,- ; netsona plao :VWe in^urp.d, ,, < —
end declaring
were isolated and not general.
war plan, telling of the coming of the
ranged from leas tliati ten 16'as high*
a a flftv-fivn and slXtV. ' ' tr‘ ! ''
■St
ick
Another hbstlle air ira-ld:lover east
wm r°' a“i *531 ^sss
vi£,mz0£:b^z| sri rar rjrs £
«t tettl. in »luck I:ne pun. no» be bonlb, |„,v,'■ In Unlted states shlpplns board.
nTllnZt £ Ik. ou.sk,r„ cl the c„y.. 1 | Jo„„ v>„„,,ne v,„.k. a„a» dobn
success Deyo - --- j Vengtek, alias John Volmer Bugtek,
BAD STRIKES IN GERMANY an Austrian and supposed spy, arrest-
__ -- I ed more than a month ago by the
etructing railroads in France and pre- More Reports of the Dogs Growing sheriff of Garfield county is held in
pectations in building the army and
its industrial supvorts at home, trans-
porting men across the ocean, con-
All roadhouses seized by the sheriff
of Oklahoma county in the future will
be used as pest houses.
The city of Blackwell has an epi-
demic of small pox. In a mild form.
There are forty known cases at pres-
ent.
Methodist and Presbyterian church-
es at Collinsville are beginning one of
the biggest revival meetings ever at-
tempted in Collinsville.
J. T. Godard, Valley Britton. Ike
._ I Britton and A. L. Durand have been
arrested charged with violation of the
■ .....- law that prohibits growth of the Rus-
sian thistle. The men are farmers
near Frederick.
Four hundred and ninety-eight men
have ’enlisted in the regular army
through the recruiting stations in Ok-
I. The Sabbath a Boon, Not a Burdon
(w. 23-28). It has been suggested
thnt this passage, particularly verse 23,
Indicates something of the poverty and
simplicity of the lives of the disciples,
thnt they lived not only a day at n time
but literally from hand to mouth.
America is the most prodigal nntlon on
double that of the year before.
As was thercape in 191$ .and 1916,
many farmers were nble <0 pay for
their land outright with the proceeds
of their first year’s crop. Further evi-
dence of the prosperity of Western
Canada Is shown by the fact that one
tn every twenty of the population la
now the owner of an automobile. If
the farming community alone Is taken.
It will be found that the proportion of
automobile owners la still greater. The
bank clearings of the leading cities of
Western Canada were consistently
higher than they were In the corre-
sponding periods of 1916, and then they
were higher than the year preceding.
In Winnipeg $500,000,000 more was
cleared in the 11 months ending No-
vember 30 than In the same months a
paring to strike the enemy with every
resource at the country’s command.
While many things disclosed Im-
pressed, the committee was frankly
amazed when told that the men of
thirty-two national guard and national
army divisional camps are ready to
go today at need.
Greatest Army In History.
Never in the history of time, he do
dared has an army of Its size been
raised, equipped, trained and pre-
pared for battle as had that of the
United States. Mr. Baker took re-
aponsibility for getting men under
training before their equipment was
ready “to the last shoe button.’’ Such
Weary of Their Master.
-- • ■ 1 v i.
London.—Serious strikes ar.o yep*rt-
ed to be in progress throughout Ger-
many. In Berlin and its suburbs
90,000 laborers are said to have quit
work. Various large manufacturers
of war supplies are affected. j
Dispatches from Switzerland gnd
Holland describe the strike in Berlin
and other parts of Germany, as m^ich
more serious thlan Indicated b^ the
official dispatches sent from Berlii.
According to Central News advices
from Amsterdam, nearly all of £he
workmen of the Daimler, Boersig, Jiud-
wig and General Electric works are1 on
officers as Major General Leonard ; strike. Trades unions are not dt the
Wood, he said, had urged this policy, head of the movement but several
‘ " ‘ *' — — A rt A ” Et ft
STEEL PAYS 60 MILLION TAX
Aa Excess
War Profits
Months.
for Three
He described conferences that evolved
the ordnance program and its fulfill-
ment submitting.documents tn prove
that France and* Great Britain were
supplying artillery and machine guns
for the first forces at their own urgent
request in order that ships might be
used for other purposes.
In all that ™'>r‘°r t0 ^ New York.-The United States Steel
-departure of ^.^"^Zcnssfon and Corporation paid to the federal gov-
Pershing shaved in » “J ! ernment more than half its earnings
Approved the decisions reached,, Mr ^ quarter of 1917, according
noirpr declared, and now surrounded . ,,
Baker afc‘area’ “ . officers to a statement of the corporation,
with a staff of trained regular officers TotaJ for that period
who could m be "Zhinf ism‘n FrancI amounted to $59,724,125, after making
tasks at home, Pershing Is ,n 1 allowance for $60,950,364 paid Into the
as the “eyes of.the “T6^ government treasury as war Income
step taken since has been founded on ^ profltg N(jt ,ncom6 for
his long daiiy cabled_ZZTfron7s the flnal Quarter was $48,035,344 and
Is going on at the fighting fr - I rplua for the Bame period amounted
Tables were cited to show that ° r_“°
overcrowding In the camps and can-
tonments had not been general and
the Comanche county jail awaiting
transportation to Fort Douglas, Utah,
an internment camp for enemy aliens,
to be interned for the rest of the war.
Governor Williams commissioned
three new members of the state coun-
cil of defense, bringing the total mem-
bership to nineteen. R H. Wilson,
state superintendent of education; C.
B. Ames of Oklahoma' City, who has
been actjve In Liberty L’oan drives
and L. E. Phillips of Bartlesville, who
■was state director of the Red Cross
campaign.
A renewal of the state’s fight to ob-
tain lower gasoline prices is to begin
at once as a result of the failure of the
federal government to fix prices, ac-
cording to Attorney General Freeling.
A flnal effort will be made to deter-
mine what course the federal govern-
ment intends to pursue and then the
rate case now before the state corpor-
ation commission will be pressed.
Nineteen more high schools of Okla-
homa have been accredited by the
University of Oklahoma and their
graduates admitted to the freshman
classes of the university without ex-
amination. The newly accredited
schools are: Centralia, Chelsea, Cow-
eta, Crescent, Sacred Heart Academy
at El Reno, Foyil, Frederick, Hammon,
Helena, Heavener, Hillsdale, Mill
Creek. New Wilson, Porter, Presto,
Tyrone, Putnam City and Woodward.
The Indian bill carrying appropria-
tions aggregating $11,000,000 and con-
taining new provisions governing ad-
to $16,258,272. ministration of Indian affairs was
This compares with total earnings ed b the house last week. Chief
a n in p* n J__A. 1_ ^ a# # KK OAK * J ___ .
the globe, but it Is today facing the no- ; yenr Qg0.
cessity of conservation und retrench- ■ The entry of the United States lnt*
ment, not because It is desired but of the war hns strengthened the bonds
necessity in winning this great world between thnt country and Canada. We
war struggle Perhaps.this will prove are now working together for the
^ bo a Toon growing out of the dark- 1 «ame ends Those who are not fighting
to i>e a g * ftre promottng a greater production of
ness of the days through which wo are food8tuffs In ^ connectlon Western
passing. ______ . Canada offers a wonderful opportu-
Notice that the diselp no ntty. Not only can larger quantities
particularly criticized because they ^ ygtBp)e foodstnff8 be produced, but
plucked and approprla e * . the cost of production iB lower and the
that belonged to “"“'bee c\on | remuneratIon greater than where land
it was for their o y • I is more expensive. Notwithstanding
cause they did it on the Sabbnth d^. fnct that the rice of farm prod.
The Jewish luw permlUeii them fo ^ ^ doub,ed duHng the paBt three
lahoma so far this month, according ! becauseVf their necessity, but would 7ea”- l^in^VMterrCanada^Ich
to Capt. Maruous Coveil, recruiting of- permit them to do it on the first ««»• ™ pri£
fleer in Oklahoma for the army. dlly of the week The criticism of the ^Zn CnZtn hL an eno^mous
- - Pharisees, based upon Dent. 6-14 . Ex. prepared fof tQ wheat
rSTATEHQUSE BM]
Th. Guymon Comm.rci.l »b “ JSS'tl,“t‘SSS^nlal pr«.criptl«bs „»d ! iS27ea5m«
trades are almost completely
standstill.
U.U and r.le., and U,e u,*. , »' “SSTto £»1 »-* *«WW- . .
lo«,t co.t in the country. | (ore mu.t give w.y botor. tte ».c»n
A suaaestlon to W. G. McAdoo, dl- elty of Christian service. Again he | nR(1 of between 25 and 50 per cent
rector general of the railroads, that shows that mercy is more Umn sacrl- ^ ^
the Frisco be empowered to clean out flee, and so ceremon a ema me ; Those who are contemplating coming
its freight rooms at Tulsa and set the give way before h w_ them to Western Canada cannot do better
contents on hte right-of-way, was and compass on. , f than come early In the spring when
made in a telegram sent to Washing- that the Sab a they can put In a crop and harvest it
ton by W. D. Humphrey, state corpor- (vy. 27 28) ^ “ for the (n In thls wny t^y will be
Sabbath. He, the Sou of Man isthe #b,e to nchleVe something that will
consummation and head of the race, heneflt to them-
ation commissioner.
Governor Williams was advised by —Z
Attorney General S. P. Freeling that ’^bbath'he hi set aslcje the ^ves. but also to^thej^rea.; cause for
he has power to revoke certificate. Sabbath which was the which the Allies including the Un ted
granted to notaries. The governor re “ of things to come (Col. 2:17) States, are now fighting.-Advertlse-
exacted recently by notaries for taking
acknowledgment of the oath of mea
on their questionnaires.
pensatlon. It Is true that we have no
right to judge any man regarding the
Quillie McConnell a reprieve
March 1 for a review of the case.
Connell pleaded guilty to the murder nnd are under no law whatever to keep
of Sheriff George Arnold of Lincoln seventh day.
Me- (Acts 20:7) the resurrection day,
tha^thesickness had come mostly In °* *68.243.784, net.Income of: $65,245 , = ^ itemg a„ectlng 0klahoma
.. . — i—a 377 and surplus of $21,824,554, for the . arg ^bose fixing the Chickasaw and
*v i Choctaw per capita payment at $200,
In keeping with expectations tne
extra” dividend
LCKIieuu U»U tuuic ... |
the camps where medical opinion had . Quarter
agreed it was least to be expected. prJ^ quarter.
THOUSANDS HEAR PERIG0RD of 3 percent on the common stock In
-1—Z addition to the regular common divl-
t-rench Lieutenant Has I numpnai dend of 1% and preferred to 1%. In-
Tour Through Oklahoma.
eluding a Red Cross dividend of 1 per-
cent voted in the second quarter, to-
Oklahoma City—The speaking tout tal disbUrsements on the common
shares for 1917 amounted to 18 per
cent
of Lieut. Paul Perigord of the French
army, through Oklahoma has been
one continuous ovation. He has been
filling three and four engagements a
day and lias not yet seen an empty
seat In his audiences. The climax
was reached at Oklahoma City when
five thousand people crowded Into the
unheated Auditorium while five thou-
sand more fought for admission.
Lieut. Perigord, who was a Catholic
priest teaching In a St. Paul echool
the Seminole per capita payment at
$100 and giving the state the right to
purchase several thousand acres of
Indian land In the Kiamichl moun-
tains for use as a game preserve.
A blanket ordinance making It a
violation of the city laws for any per-
son to fail to comply with all war
measures and orders of the federal
government, effective for the duration
of the war, was approved at a meet-
ing of the city council of Frederick.
The schedule of Oklahoma towns
and cities to be visited by national
• v war speakers In the week of March
New York.-In the twelve months lQ t<j J, wag announced. Roscoe Mit-
of unrestricted wa,rta™ chell, John D. Berry. Everett Colby
against American and allied 8^}PP'ng j and Dr R L Wubur, all men of na-
69 AMERICAN SHIPS SUNK
But Were Replaced by 107 Fine Ger-
man Vessels.
county, while the latter was trying to
arrest him for the robbery of a store
at Chandler, August 25, 1916. On his
plea of guilty. Judge Charles B. Wil-
son, Jr., sentenced McConnell to
ao Idea I would get him so soon.
‘Cold In the Head'
II. A Proper Use of the Lord's Day
(Ch. 3:1-5). It Is somewhat unfortu-
nate, our divisions of the Scripture in-
to chapters and verses. This next
death." It la the contention ot McCon- L“afS4Vu“™tlLPS'thf»«SSi Sff JS?*.S'KS&’toHSiSStVSS
s r^^r^df “is s^^iBHKa
lo *lory lo I £ Si
After a search of the state statutes wj1|cj1 the Jews still gathered In large HALL'B .CATARRH MEDICJNB i^UJj
rtltoi a w.. v/a ---------------, Will CO UlO dBWD BUM BOiuww nAUUBVAiAnnn
over a period of eight years, C J. numbers. We need to note (v. 2) that «n th.^
Ralston, official guide at the capitol, the qUe8ti0n which was asked of him , A11 DninrUta 75o. Te*tlmonl»l» fm«. _
has determined that the mistletoe U wa8 ^ a- falP question, not so much ^XtaP&K MBDIcmB wUl art
before the war, returned to France Germany one y®-a7 tional fame who have visited the
a a ’a nrivate He foueht thero have been aunk by 8Ubmax,nea- QVa^t nnnHitions
and enlisted as a private He fought „lxt in6 American
his way through the Marne and Ver-j 171 ftft1 tons
war
front and know exact conditions over,
... . there are leading speakers in the
vessels totalling 171,061 gross tons, j The t0am which wlu tour the
Offsetting this Iobs of American ves- WI11 start at Oklahoma City
sels, the United States since Febru- | * 1Q and lnclude Guthrie, Still-
ary 1 has added to her merchant ma- i J^h J»8hing m ReQQ EnJd Alya>
rine by the Be^e °f former German ’ward,( Clinton, Elk City, Ana-
and Austrian owned ships, a total oil Hobart, Lawton, Chickasha,
107 vessels having a gross tonnage of , °ark0’ Man ^ and Frederick. The
686,494, leaving on the credit side of , bnyaer, m:anguiu
’toldW'the territory which j ^hl^crral^we™ TSt gataS , 5^12.
dun, became a lieutenant, carries a
full assortment of medals for bravery
and Is now attached to American
training camps, and speaking, for the
war department.
The most interesting statement in
his speech was the revelation that the
American troops are stationed in Lor-
™,od,T r.; irx
tons.
T^ lZ of life !PU1P«. Miami, McAlester Tab,equah.
a k , nf fho'slxtv-I Ddrant, Ada, Shawnee, Atoka, Tisho-
been made that .Pe^hlng was‘ | ^ne^Amerioan ships was more than mlngo. Hugo,
where more definite than “somewhere ( 300 pergonSf howaver.
tn France.”
More Air Raida On London.
London.—Enemy airplanes made
two more attacks on London, crossing
the Kent and Essex coasts first at 8
o’clock In the evening and proceeding
straight toward the metropolis. The
first bombs were dropped on the city
between 9 and 10 o'clock when British
aviators gave chase, bringing down
one hostile plane near Esse*. Some
of the Invading machines penetrated
to the cnpltal, dropping bombs In
their flight. It was officially an
nounced that a second attack by air
raiders wa3 delivered after midnight
Villa Kills 110 On Rescue Train.
Juraez.—More than 110 soldiers and
passengers were killed by Villa fol-
lowers 25 miles south of Santa Rosa-
lia, when the Villa troops dynamited
a work train going to Rellano to re-
pair the railroad line and remove the
debris of a passenger train which had
been robbed and burned there. Fran-
cisco Villa led the attack in person.
The Villa followers then proceeded to
Santa Rosalia, where only 125 soldiers
were stationed. They killed a num-
ber of these, executed others and then
ooted the place.
etta, Vinita, Holdenville, Sulphur. Ma
dill. Wagoner and Ardmore.
Reports from 34 field deputies of
Hubert L. Bolen, Internal revenue col-
lector says that everywhere farmers
are flocking to them and are,kept in
line waiting to give In their returns.
More than 5,000 individual income tax
returns have been received by the
Internal revenue collector through the
field deputies. This week the returns
have been coming at the rate of more
than 200 a day. Collector Bolen estl-
nates that there will be about 100,009
copie in the state subject to the ln-
ome tax and from 30,000 to 40,000
ore subject to excess profit taxea
the state flower. The coreopsis la bone9^ seeking for Information, bat
stressed In the fresco work at the rather tbey “watched him” for they
state house, being used as an orna- wanted t0 flnd something with which
ment on almost every floor of the 1 t0 trap b[m> jesus taught that It to
building, and capitol visitors had ar- jawfui (0 do good on the Sabbath Day,
rived at the conclusion that the core- that Jt ls |awfUi to heal on the Sab-
opsls was the state flower. Ralston bath j-^y (Matt. 12:10) that it is law-
says mistletoe was fixed as the state ful to re8tore a i08t ass or ox on the
flower by the legislature' in 1910, and Snbbatb Day (Luke 14:5; Matt. 12:11)
no change had ever been made, al- that a raan ls 0f more value than a
though often advocated. sheen (Matt. 12:13). and that the new --------------- . . .
Resolutions were adopted by the methods and new times demunded new {^j^^uinWin^Tabfeto? rfoestot
County Clerks’ Association In Okla- ! applications (Mark 2:21, 22). In theae affect th0 head or stomach. Buy your
homa City which will result in sev- teachings Jesus does not necessarily j wlnter-8 guppiy now. Price 25c.—Adv.
eral demands being made on the next abonsb 0r abrogate the ancient fourth
#'rT’J. Cheney A Co., Toledo. Ohio.
Ought to Have,
“He hasn’t the ghost of a chance
with that girl.”
“I don’t see why not, when he to •
lad of spirit.”
tnai a iuhu jo «i juuio ------ PROMPT RELIEF. fioueb«
.be,p (Mutt. 12 am. and that .ha aa. »» *• ««—>■
legislature for increase in the help
and salaries allowed county clerks.
An increase of 25 per cent in deputy
hire In the offices of the county clprks
will be asked. The resolution also
called for a petition to be placed be-
fore the legislature for a mandatory
consus in 1919, which census would
be the basis for establishing the sal-
aries of all county officers and depu-
ties .with the approval of the boards
of county commissioners.
A proposed combination of ice deal-
ers In Oklahoma City as outlined at
a conference of Governor Williams,
Attorney General S. P. Freeling and
dealers bumped Into the state anti-
trust law, which the governor said he
believes would prevent any BUch mo-
nopoly of* the buying, selling and de-
livery ol ice was being suggested.
Governor Williams lost interest in the
plan when he found that the com-
panies intended to Increase the price
of Ice to the consumer, even though
they claimed a big saving In cos'
would be effected.
commandment, but rather the misin-
terpretation, misuse and misapplica-
tion of the Sabbath law. For a cor-
rect Interpretation of the Old Testa-
ment Sabbath see Isa. 58:18, 14. The
difference between the Jewish Sabbath
and Christian Lord’s Day is a matter
of counting; we begin to count at the
point of the resurrection of Jesus. The
Sabbath Day is a means to an enfi;
it ls not the end itself.
America's Great Heritage.
The man was really and organi-
cally sick; he had a withered hand
which all could see—no “morul error”
nbout It at all, and he was really heal-
ed. The Lord’s Day ls America’s great
heritage. Are we going to throw It
away? It ls of economic value as well
ns a spiritual heritage. The observ-
ance of a day of rest has actually In-
creased the amount of output in the
munition fuctorles of England. In this
land of hustle nnd bustle the brain
needs the rest, the soul the feeding,
and the body the relaxation which Sun-
day observance alone can furnish.
Any man who would sue a girl for
breach of promise ought to be confined
tn an upholstered cell.
To keep clean and healthy take Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They ref-
late liver, < bowels and stomach. Adv.
There are two sides to every story.
The victory you win means defeat for
the other fellow.
DON'T GAMBLE
that your heurt's all rlghL “laM
rare. Take “Renovine”—a heart and
nerve tonic. Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
Bread Is the staff of life, but the roll
of fame ls something else.
™J*r «"• Murine It tor Tlred Eyss.
MovlBft M.WS-JS E^L-
An Apt 8tudent.
A young woman who went to Colum-
bla to take her degree of doctor of
philosophy married her professor In
-3
the middle'of her second year. When
/ i
she announced her engagement one of
y‘
her friends said:
■ /; J
“But, Edith, I thought you came up
1
here to get your Ph-D.”
1
“So I did,” replied Edith; “but I had
'' ■#
ftrt fertM (n Co. CM*!<0. to tm M*
- Alls
H
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The Yale Democrat. (Yale, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 31, 1918, newspaper, January 31, 1918; Yale, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1139421/m1/3/?rotate=90: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.