Okeene Eagle. (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 8, 1911 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
OKI-HNE i:ac;i.e,
I*iiI»1 Weekly.
TI C. Chatman, Prop'r.
$100 a your, in Advance.
I nl rnl at Ilie (>ko«Mc peg, Office | mill Is to get nil lie call without
If li'Ciilul.tllM 1114) ter
^ the supreme hour
work. To lx> a dude in actious, j .__
dress or association is a guaran
tee Hint his upper works arc not
hi proper condition. His onlv
CALCULATION OF THE DATE
THE CRUCIFIXION.
V.ivert isiiiK Hates (lie Snin-t to
WJ. No Cut Unto lor oiit-si<i»>rs.
paying for it and to insult those Pref' We8,on Deiv.d Oeepiy Into
who misplaced confidence in him. Anc,ant Recorda ,nd " 8ati-
A few years hence lie w ill he mi
known or m disgrace, while the
young man who chooses a life of
Tin* rain will follow the drouth honest, upright toil will
and all will be as tlio weather among tho highly roapeeUx! l>y
ruler willetli. [all who know him, self satisfied
x, . , , and pnospenais.
Never lie a straggler m the .. * , . ,
, i l oting man, which are you
of life; lx* a hero and . , , A '
going to In- an honor to your-
fled at to Correctness
of Time.
;ame o[ tile; !»e a
mingle in the strife
self, your family and commun-
ity, ora nuisance and disgrace
Prof. L. II. Weston of rortjgfh!.
Oro . malo>N a very Into real in* ealcu-
h»‘ lation. fixing thd1 dale of the cruel
llxlon of Christ on April 18 at noon. In
the' seventy-fourth Julian year, or the
twenty ninth year A. I>. He does It by
computing tho position of the sun and l
moon.
According to Prof. Weston, the full
moon occurred at 7:41. Jerusalem
menu time, on the I7ih day of April.
71 Julian. Thla was a Julian Sunday,
and was the thirteenth day of tho
moon by the Jewish calendar. It wsa
Texas democracy is hot worn
the devil ami tho deep sea with to all?
the great anti prohibitionist clc- Okccne has a good number of « rule or taw among the Jew* that the
nieilfc with (.loveruppColquitand blight, intelligent voting men day began at sunset; hence the eaten-
">'■ cliurol. fcniinftt|dial U.UI. «rilleD forth* Lave j Z
Home conditions now prevailing after full tnoon mill a Sunday (sun's
that are not leading you to tl.e d:‘y)- Thu8 ,he fu,i mot’" ocl'urred »*
i • i i:r. . i , c 7:41 in the morning of the 17th of
high life you can lw proud of. | Apr„. JuUnn year, and that in the cat
liim. Will it divide the party
<>r tin* church?
There is probably no one liv-
ing in this country that has ever
xporieneod so much and so in
'list* heat and prolonged drouth
at this time of year before. 1 hat Farmers, many of you have - __________„
1 • iwo not a great deal more |os( your lx*vs and girls from ! tbo ^r8t of Aries, the vernal
day of the moon, or the one before the
fourteenth, and was a Jewish holiday. |
The Passover was always celebrated
on the fourteenth day of the muon
next following the Bolar ingress into
dekness is the wonder of all.
equinox, and it most always, by law.
farm life to the uncertain and ,,e celebrated on the fourteenth day of
Alfalfa and good stock with I’lwiiriotis life of the small town the moon, as shown on the calendar
'•* «• "ho**...*™* city Do you | .» «.
will put any farmer that will kno" the rt*aSOtlS why? ■ tered Arles at 25 minutes after 6 p.
use tho Same amount of judg ^ ell. first and greatest mis- tn. on March 28. which was a Tuesday,
•nent and energy that is required *ako aH \oU frequently, in
io run successfully a grocery on presence, grumble of the
the credit side of the world and oas>’ 1,fo t,a* fellows in towns
a much more pleasant life for jcities enjoy. \\ hat do you
t lie whole family.
Summer fallow that
The new moon following was at 19
minutes after 1 p m„ April 2. a Sat-
urday. Full moon, then falling on the
seventeenth at 19 minutes to 8 a. in.,
shows Terlullian, the Latin historian.
. . , to be correct tn affirming that the
know ot tin' sleepaSS High s Pnasover feast was on the eighteenth
passed by tho average town or of the calends of April,
dwarf city man as to how he is to 111 (t A*ain- says Prof. Weston, modern
»"»i r' Rmm hi. n,c,,„e»;
.oid make a proper see*! bed for only made while he is working Christ was born later than 4 n. c..
vour fall sowing of w heat for yours is going on dav -n d and T<>r,u,*'an clearly states the nativ-
- net*, ami then learn that eon- if von have laiU right
i mucus w heating, or any other plans, sleeping or waking ycu ty-eighth after the death of Cleopatra.
• no crop, year in and year out. are gaining, (.'rime t finds at ,hus ,n the seven hundred and fiftieth
wiltmnt .1. , ^ ‘ , / year of Rome, or 4 D. C.. Christ was
W ithout r^toi change foi the every corner to entice the mex- n>.ore than 32 years of age. for his
;;round, IS leading the sheriff to periciiccd hoys and girls to fol- ministry began the third year before
ell you out of house and home, low its allurements and tunny, the cmcitixion. He was 33 years old
' !ive join land tight; cultivation many fall by the wayside Uiat j ‘Vrenaeus says the crucifixion was at
.ind use less of it and got better on the farms would have made the end of I'antei’s 70 weeks of proph-
i.'suits. honored and respected men and ecy This rnds about the commence
I **t every man Ik1 a booster for 1 * • 1 ul *1)111 them an(j t^e c-eoor.j year of ti e two hun- I
l lie town. If YOU can't COIltrib interest in 'OUC business dred and second Olympia'; More ex- j
1 le cisl. wl.on it i ti, . "bib- 1 hev are growing up and artly- ,h* fivp«nth -vear Gf ,he
n casll When It is the vita! ; 7 * 1 , of Tiberius began on August 19. 74 I
ower to pull something for the ^'r,,uao. then haoitr> of tnoughi Julian, and the first year of the two
' own, gel out and sing and shout ^*lve coif Ctfjves. pigs and hundred and second olymni^d or ’ d
eliickens, all their own, afid talk on July 14, Jult»n. and this date
with them on the care and man-
1 Okt*ene so tvut statue waver-
ing person who ran do may he
aspired to put in his mite. I'e-
.comber that the Redeemer once um,er ,heir o»»servation. Teach
-aid that “he who is not for me lhat al1 wo,k is honorable and
1- against me." That is equally ennoWil,« lf ngldly done Tin t
• ueof tho obligations of citizen ’>NVn the 1kh's tJ e id,‘
ship. - Pull if you can; if you Jrones from lhe hives and diive
* an t pull, grunt for those who tkeni out to dle-
are pulling. Hive them social entertain-
ment-', where they can mingle
also er.dcd Daniel’s 70 weeks. Rut the
crucifixion was at the passover, three
agement of all things that come months before the end of the olym-
piad. Irenaeus used round numbers
and the fractional year is one-fourth
minus. Accordingly, says Prof. Wes-
ton. it would seem Impossible to set
any other date for the crucifixion of
Jesus Christ than Monday, April IS.
Julian year 74. at noon (sixth hour),
Jerusalem.
The Stork and the Eagle.
. U. ^ia,°f Wilh Hieir growing companions, talking'a^urtn^animairan^bRd*
n >hioiu l att in In- ioft:-ai to and load thorn into discussion'* to a class of little girls," said secre-
pardon tho rich bank robbets, of the various domestic topes ***7 D,ck of th« board of education in
(o^ of Nvw Vovk au,l Wal.1, ,ha, ,hey mi.., learn if ,..vy
<1 (. Imago. : would sttci't'otl. Take tbo bt'^t schools.
^ hon a man commits a critn
* t him suffer tho ponaltv fot
i aat crime, let it bi»
b vote. Avboiht'r he is black,
w Into or ivd, rich v*t* |HH>rl
■ 1110 severity of punishment
li>ts of agricultural and house- She bad to!d them about the car'
, , , , ,. , . nivorous animals and beasts of the
Ilf ul | ll nit.at ions A OU vail obt till and began asking questions
o\» r so ;4|KJ have them leal and llis al>out birds of prey.
cussed by all " Can anyone in the class tell me,’
Study their carters and eee 5
if I) it lilt* has developed si»nu* the sky and carry off a small child
There was a moment's pa"se, and
then a little girl tn the rear of the
classroom frantically raised her hand.
“ *1 know.’ fair)*- shouted the bright
pupil, under stress of great excite-
ment, 'It's the stork, ’cause one of 'em
brought a baby to our house last
night:”'—Philadelphia Record.
a> a rvtumuit ofioct on ihone special faculty for a mechanical *'i,h ease?’
'litemplating crime, and the calling. If so faster the desire
ot pardons front ;is far as possible, for that may
and ptesidents Tics he the only source of success
..ulo the robbing of banks by u,u a go xi understanding .f
-n t tii i.»»s and tho looting of farm life leaves a safe harbor in
lbhc funds by those elected cn case of a failure in the oth.r
»eir claims of honesty and up- calling. No man that labors f r
2h11less a matter ot almost a living is as sure of it as is the
uly occurrence. 1 lie W a Is lies, farmer and No Other Man Has
lonses and other great bank As Much Leisure Time During
ivckeis an* not one whit more the Year As He Does,
ntitltvl to executive clemency
tan the cheap footpad that matter with vou as parents nn<l
tolds up unsa-pecting persons _ __
id takes their valuables at tlie if vou but use tact and energy b* a*#ertcd. "American* protect their
...» ..r------ - children loo much, and .t makes them
‘ ‘ • " l!*Pn,1r^- precoc'ou* and dlareapoctfut. A little
TTietarmeris tho liase of a'l ilarpi=8 UJX and then reinforces the
prosjverity and he is the Fe *r cf morml perpoaes of the child
any man, rich or poor, if hr* is
..I., i - , . , self-respecting ami self reliant,
p «t an csta: fished ideal vt son.e.as fie has the right to be.
W*r..s Children Spanked.
Greeley. Col—American children aro
tot sufficiently spxnkcd, declared Dr.
□. Stanley Hall, president of Clark uni-
Farmers, this is an nnpora t Ter*u*- 'Vorcester. Mass.. In an ad-
dress.
' 1 do not beMcve In too much flos-
you have It all at your command (Ting, but It should not be abolished."
■oiut of a gun.
No young man is any credit
himself, !**> |ait ids ut li.e
iminuuity he lives in tint lus
The doctor defended laughing "until
one falls from the chair and rolls un-
der the table, also championed get-
ting angry, crying and dancing.
Look ahead and see where these endar of Cnlippus was the thirteenth
things are drifting and Cut Them
Out.
It It’S
HA fS
you want
We have the kind you are lcoking for.
It its
SHOES OR 6XFHBS
we Have them also.
II It’S
DRESS GOODS
*
We have them in Organdies,
Lawns, Dimities,-India Linens, Tisues,
and many other pretty kinds.
li it’s something to eat
we carry a complete stock ol
GB0SS8ES
Come and leave an order or
Phono 157-
\
Yours to please,
6. W. BflRDRIGK
V
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Chapman, H. C. Okeene Eagle. (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 8, 1911, newspaper, June 8, 1911; Okeene, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1170735/m1/4/: accessed May 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.