The Kiowa County News. (Lone Wolf, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 1, 1920 Page: 4 of 8
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—
Mill M».« .. - -#-T -*--1---—*•—*-*?
The Kiowa County News
».V W. IIORNBECK, Editor
[one wolf, okla., )uiy i. two
A r Mltlcal Sccr.
j.,.«nr«pCf.i. II 05 Hi>r T««M"> Ad»«no«
Published Every fhursday
W. W. and Halllt Hoinlxck
i }
Owun
fcainrarMI *1 UM. Po.t 0«o* »« Wolf *
Hnnonit CIMI Util Matter Apr l». tK**
•"'eders
u;i
Doans Edutei:
Knoin an how* vurn
have been watc/ * «
uv the convent' un ')»■
the windy city on tin
iccent un bein some v 'at uv a
obsurver miself an a ><»litical
fore kaster uv noate t. * this
*i
You Guard Against Burglar*, 1
But What About Hats?
Rata steal million* «»f ilollara’
worth of gruin, chicken*. eggs,
etc. Destroy property and are a
. ... rnenuce to health. I' you ure
lake 1 troubled with rats, try Rat-Snap.
It will surely kill them- prevent
odors. Cats or dogs won't touch
it. Comes in cakes. Three si/ *s.
25c, 50c. $1. Sold and guaran-
.ttT* ♦ *. ■ ***••
/ L
'V-l ■/ ’■ iSH
lyg^fl'l
r
ia fine TMsg,
•>*.
advertising rates
. I,
hZI^Z l„*l null ■ - l“r III*-
to. front I.»K« 7 l**» P"' l‘n#- bUt,i ^ Vl
Iftc |ht Hba iNM'h Insertion _
juapiciiis occashun to w„tc you | teed by Stranw & Warren end
. .. . • i Live and IaO Live drug store,
a few lints on tbo tub - . ______
Now if the signs uv the timer,
^3^
False in All”
On Sunday, June 20th, 1020. the Daily Ardrnorito ran the
following statement in a seven column headline:
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
On* jfNf .
HU nionOto
Tltreo month*
The Oklahoman Tricked
Monday the Daily Oklahoman
is expresed in the faces uv the
raypublicans one meets in Okla-
homa jest now this man Harding
is the man who h«B put the word
“hard” in the winnin of the G.
0. p. (Grand Old Penrose) an
that man Cooledge is more than j
cool: he is a ice berg to the be-
lievers uv progressives everi
where. The seleckshun uv this |
CHINESE WORRY OVER FOOD
High Coat af Rica la Beginning
Arouae Dlacontent Among tha
Poorer Claaaea.
ticket by Penrose an Lodge an
Our baseball team registered aj
victory last Sunday over Hobart,;
score being 1-1. Everyone present;
i voted this the best game seen;
this season. We are very glad to
China is a backward nation, so its see so much interest evinced in j
“working diwaV* da not strike. But, ^aim s as it has been a
b**ing human, they g»‘t uneasy over aource from which we have cb-
the thing which ,fif>turl>< un gn .itly, tajne(j a goodly sum of money as
namely the high cost of living. < lu* | we|i as arousing a great deal or
coolies,
“When even th«* school children raised t K ir voices
in appeal for Liberty Loans, Core, the ‘Oiator/ held
unbroken silence.’'
The facts are that on October ITth 1917, Sei 'tor (tore j
delivered an address in the city of New \«>rk in vrh.ch he said: ,
“It is as much a public duty to buy bonds as to pav luxes. ihe ^
man with the pucketbook must stuud buck of the l >> with the .
bayonet.”
new
representatives uv grate gobs
chiefly
Oil
we BuppoM1, livo
The list of their
piuiiuh.t • — —— » i ppi inv iiui'i < « * n ■ ^
carried an article headed Amen a|j 0o(jjeg uv money at the home
de Honorable” which purported uv Sheers-Suwbuck Ko. has even
to Ik* an apology by the editorial
management of that paper fm
attacking Senator Gore’s war
record.
In the issue of Wednesday is
an explanatory statement by the
managing editor, who sass the
objectionable article was smug-
gled into the newspaper clandes-
tinely bv a disgruntled, dis-
charged and dishonorable former
employe of the Daily Oklaho-
man.”
Something should be done to
save our country from the tides
of discon’ent now sweeping over
the nation. And the best way
to do that is to go to the foun-
tain head and find the cause.
State election ballots for the
August 3 primary have been
printed for the three political
parties as follows; Democrat,
310.000: Republican, 200,000; So-
cialist. luO.OOO.
We had hoped to be able to
put the name of the next presi-
dent in this issue of the News,
but up to time of going to press
the president-makers at San
Francisco had not decided that
question by making nomination.
put more pep than ever in the
demmycrats that er willin to
sacrifice their selves upon the
alter uv publick opinion an be
president.
The general opinion, an he is
the greatest uv all generals, has
said and is still savin that enny
uv em that gits theirselves nom-
inated at Frisco 'II be lected.
By the time that this reaches
yore sanctum sanctorium it may
be that the demmycrats '11 be
thru ballitin an yore announce-
ment to the publick already
made, but enny rates remember
what I sav, thet when the snow
fiies agin thet Cooledge will be
cold storage an Harding will bt
sorry thet he missed bein a can-
didate fer the sinnet where hi*
mane objeck was to'send garden
seeds to his constituents an vote
with the Morganfellers.
As other observashuns come
to vew will rite you as the cam-
pane progresses.
Youres rayspectable,
Obberyar.
iiriri; increases is brief, but it i* xuf-
ticicnt, remarks the Hartford ( ou-
riwit. The dreadful tale is soon told
that whereus t he price* of ric e in 1913
vu* $7.GU Mexican per picul (about
133 1-3 pounds), now it per
picul. And whereas at the former
date a Mexican dollar whs worth
about half a gold dollar, today the*
two are nearly at a parity. And if
that is not bad enough, one may
search back in the market quotations
and find that in 17It* rice sold in
Shanghai for $2 Mexican per picul.
Whether we consider rice at 5 2-3
cent* a pound or at a little b*>s than
7 cents, or nt the 1 1-2 cents it was
200 years ago, the figure, compared
w ith what we pay, seems a ridiculous
one over whic h to be alarmed. But
other things than the absolute price
have to he considered. In Japan,
where wage rates rule* higher than in
China, a cooli® get> 80 cents a day.
The highest piM tailors get $1 25
a day and bricklayers $1.12 1-2. 1 ho
average for labor there is 64 umU a
day.
interest and enthusiasm. Each
game brings our club-house
neurt r.
It is hoped that a very large
part of the members will be out1
at tbo ne \t meeting. Besides
having a good deal of business
to attend to we have some
monkey-business in the form of
newly we ds to wmk over at that
time. Any ideas ami help ini
this direction will be greatly ap-
preciated. A committee -has
been appointed to see that
Messrs. Love joy and Legate are'
present. Legion Reporter.1
At a meeting in Brooklyn more than twenty o million j
dollars was subscribed in Liberty Bonds following a pcech by .
Senator Gore. On another occasion Senator Gore to k Sucre- [
tary Houston's place at a great patriotic rally in Wusto gt »o.
*
How much longer arc* the self-respecting citizens ol
homa going to tolerate such cowardly lies on the part ol the <j
great news mediums?
DO YOU KNOW?
If the Ardmoreite were fuir, would it not publish the
owing seven column headline next Sunday;
“While the school children were raising their
voices in appeal for Liberty Loans, (iore, the
Orator, was addressing great patriotic meet-
ings in Washington, New York and Brooklyn,
at one of which Twenty-Five Million Dollars
in Bonds was subscribed following his speech.
fut-
INTERESTING DATA ON CRIME
Proof That Lawbreakers Select Spe-
cial Months In Which to Conduct
Their Nefarious Operations.
Legate-Coulson
The Supreme Court has been
called upon to decide whether
cloth is clothing under the Lever
act and the head of the Ameri-
can Woolen Company a profiteer.
Also and incidentally whether a
federal judge who decides that
cloth is just cloth and not wear-
ing apparel woulden’t make a
better trust lawyer than a judge.
New wheat now being trans-
ferred from the farmer’s wagon
to the elevators is testing from
GO to 64 pounds-and the yield
per acre is far greater than had
been expected. Threshing in
this territory is in full blast and
the local elevators will soon be
filled. The preparation by farm
ers to store wheat in their own
grainaries was a sensible move.
The keynote address at San
Francisco by Homer Cummings
put the Democratic party in the
proper attitude before the voters
of these United States. It was
bold and plain-spoken with little
attempt at word-painting. He
said the peace treaty’s defeat in
the senate was a black crime
against civilization, and charac-
terized the Republican platform
as "reactionary and provincial.”
“Filled with premeditated slan-
ders and vague promises, it will
be searched in vain for one con-
structive suggestion for the ref-
ormation of the conditions which
it criticises and deplores.” he
continued.” “The oppressed
people of the earth will look to
it in vain. It contains no mes-
sage of hope for Ireland; no
word of mercy for Armenia; and
it conceals a sword for Mexico.
It is the work of men concerned
more with material things than
with human rights., It contains
no thought, no purpose which
can give impulse or thrill totho9e
who love liberty and hope to
make the world a safer and hap*
%-r place for. the average map.”
Last Sunday afternoon at 2
o’clock Mr. Wilburn H. Legate
of Lone Wolf and Miss Lena
Laverne Coulson of Weatherford
were united in marriage at the
home of the bride’s parents in
Weatherford, Rev. Lester
Weaver, pastor of the Methodist
church, officiating.
Those present at the wedding
were the parents, three brothers
and a sister-in-law of the bride.
Miss Fay Legate, a sister of the
groom. Miss Katie Smith and
Miss Vernell Boyles of Weather
ford and Maben Onstott of Lone
Wolf.
After the ceremony an ice
course was served, after whicn
the bride and groom left for
Lone Wolf with Maben Onstott,
who had accompanied Mr,
Legate to Weatherford that
morning, in the car. arriving in
Lone Wolf about 7 p. m. and
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Y.
Onstott until Monday when they
went to housekeeping in the
residence east of the parsonage
of the M. E. Church South,
The bride in the daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. L. F. Coulson of
Weatherford. She is a graduate
of the Southwestern Normal
school and was a popular teacher
in the Lone Wolf school the past
year. The groom is at the head
of the men’s clothing depart-
of Onstott's store, and is one
of Lone Wolf's best young men.
A host of friends wish Mr.
and Mrs. Legate happiness.
Tho “Almanack of Crime” is the
result of many years’ research by a
well-known continental crime ex-
pert, who has been steadily collect-
ing statistics for it nearly all his life.
The origin of this unique almanac
is very simpl *. remarks the Montreal
Herald. Like a good many other
people, the expert thought not only
that crime was mure common during
certain niuiitlis of the year, but that
certain criinus occurred more fre-
quently in one mouth than in an-
other. The compiler found that
most cases of murder occurred in
January, dune and At '/list, and few-
est in November, December and
February. The favorii * month with
poisoners is .May, while the monlb
they liked least was Septeo her. .Sep-
tember, in fact, is one of the least
“crimy” months in the whole cal u-
dar. Just as murderers dislike No-
vember uid December, it was just
these months that burglars and
‘hievea g. uorally got bu y. Forge'-,
as, one might have expected, * -om
round about quart er doyu r. .ire fre-
quently than any other times m tb*
jwar to show their skill.
Do you know that a great deal
of firain is lost each year by
lightening and tornado?
Do you know that you can in- j
sure your crop from the time it!
is ripe until it is sold for its full]
value against loss of this charac-,
ter for a very small cost?
Insurance of this kind covers
on grain and seeds of all kinds,
cut or uncut, threshed or un- j
threshed, in shocks, stacks and
ricks, in dwelling houses, barns,;
bins, tanks, granaries and cribs.
You pay only for the time you
hold your grain.
Come in and let us write your
insurance in the St. Paul.
Orient Loan and Realty Co.
THE GORE VOLUNTEERS'
Oklahoma City.
Political AUvertl*r*m#nt
Henderson Bros.
COAL, GAS, OIL aod FEED
Satisfaction guaranteed on anything bought from us.
We deliver anywhere in town.
• PHONE 118
;i0 Itaoiium I When Yon Buy a ^ FUCk
In loving remembrance of
Th? many friends of J. N.
Gates will regret to hear that he
has not been doing well since
going to Colorado three weeks
ago for the benefit of his health.
He is in the Star Ranch Sanita-
rium, Colorado Springs, taking
treatment for tuberculosis.
Mrs. Sarah McMillan our dear
wife and mother who entered
into rest ten years ago today.
July 4. 1910:
l he precious one from us is gone.
The voice we loved is stili.
A p'ace is vacant in our home
Which never can be filled.
However long our lives may last,
Whatever land we view,
Whatever joy or grief be ours,
We will still remember you.
The ones who miss her.
Her husband J. J. McMillan and
children.
ON THE HOOD
imitiimiiiiimiiuiiiii
iARBER SHOP
Bath and Laundry Attached
Newly furnished with
modern equipment and
best conveniences. Ex-
pert workmen. We ask
for share of public pat-
ronage. South room of
Walker drug store build-
ing. Give us a trial.
mm ‘INTERNATIONAL”
When you buy a motor truck you expect to
use it ti long time. You are making a perma-
nent investment that must be profitable. Be-
sides being sure that you are investing in a
good truck, you want to know that the manu-
facturer will be in business live or tun years
from now.
INTERNATIONAL MOTOR TRUCKS
have over 75 years of manufacturing expedi-
ence and a 140-million-dollar corporation back
of them. This is reasonable assurance that
if you should need service or a repair part in
the future, this company will still be in busi-
ness and ready to take care of your require-
ments.
International Motor Trucks have many superior
mechanical features that appeal to practical men -
heavy-duty powerful engine, the simple internal
gear drive, the interchangable bearings. It will be
worth an hour of vour time to investigate. Write,
call up, or come in.
VTIM TUNGELN MOTOR GO.
Phone 8 LONE WOLF, OKLA.
C. F. STRINGER
a
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Lost —Package of drygoods.
Leave at News ottice or call Mrs.
H. H. Williams.
“It Looked Like a Battlefield in
Europe” Said Mr. C. Dunster.
“Was staying at a hotel in a
small Pennsylvania town. Early
one morning l went io the stable
to hire a rig and was shown a
pile of dead rats killed with R it-
Bnap the night before. Looked
like a battlefield inEurope. Three
sizes, 25c, 50c, $1. Sold and guar-
anteed by Strange N Warren and
Live and Let Live drug store.
ZENSAL
Stops-the-ltch
DRY ZENSAI. for Eczema, Tetter,
Salt Rlieum 3nd all dry, scaly erup-
tion*. MOIST ZENSAL for Weeping
Skin and all watery eruptions. All
drug gins o* by »w.ii ioi 75 tb«
jar,
r*** jWWSAI* CM? 0KUM40IW.A C4TV
Mela O-artwia,
pp:-33:;Sisas
if
HIGGINS &
Ghoice
I :<sf >
W
SHELBURNE
Groceries
Harvest Orders, large or small, Filled Promptly.
AND LISTEN! To our general stock we have added a new feature,
BII.I.IIvEN SHOES
The Wonder Shoe of the Twentieth Century
Recommended ns the most perfect foot covering for ytmng and old, re-
gardless of p ice, that has ever been produced. The high grade work-
manship, styli-h appearance and best materials makes the BILL1KEN
Shoe popular the world over. Come in and inspect this new stock.
PHONE II
I igstos k Shelburne.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hornbeck, W. W. The Kiowa County News. (Lone Wolf, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 1, 1920, newspaper, July 1, 1920; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1172956/m1/4/?q=virtual+music+rare+book: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.