The Tahlequah Sun (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 48, Ed. 1 Monday, January 1, 1912 Page: 1 of 8
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LET THE"
SUNSHINE
!N YOUR HOME
i^Yln nnWTf- '^>
ITS
DIFFERENT
FROMTHERtST
VOLUME 3
TAHLEQUAH, OKLA., MONDAY, J2NU n Y / >9//
-
MUM Ft t= 09 -43
SILLY SUNDAY
\
10
Whisl ev's all right in its place
—bur. that place is in hell.
I stand for civic liberty, but to
hell with your personal liberty..
Tiie American home is the
true heritage for the people, of
the people and by the people.
You might as well try to reg-
ulate a powder mill in hell as to
regulate the saloon by high li-
cense.
ORDER FOR HEARING PETITION FOR
APPROVAL OF FULLBLOCD DEED
Stare of Oklahoma, Cherokee Coun-
tv. In County Court.
In re Kstate of [jewift Cochran, Deoeas-1
"S^^ay Of December,! E' W, a real estate
A. D, UU1, it appearing that Annie Han Muskojf66, hcis oft-'Ctcd a
Carey, Alcie Woodall and Jackson d al wi h E:ntst McDaniel and
Cochran, having filed their pe ition in I has taken over the Tahlequah
this court for the approval of their war- Herald. Mr. Justus traded Mus-
raiity deed to rlieir interest in the allot- • , ..
: ,T ,, , , . kogee residence Lropertv tor the
ment of Lewis Cochran, deceased: , *
It is here and now ordered, adjudged ' ^ lt'Ver house and lot il) the
and decreed that the same be set regnIar- north part Of town and then
SCALDIO TO DEATH |A
IN BATH TUB
E OF LAZY
They have our homes, out-
families and Hour business so
■close to hell on high license you
■can smell the sulphur fumes.
I believe that it is impossible
to conduct and maintain a clean
:government undtr a saloon ii-
■cense policy.
t
They threaten my life. If they
shoot my b dy full of holes I'll
■go down shouting defiance to the
■damnable gang.
You might as well try to dam
the Niagara with toothpicks as
to stop the wave of reform
sweeping over our land.
If the breweries lost a million
•dollars in the sale of their traffic,
then the people that voted the
saloons out have made a million.
ly for hearing on Monday, the 15th day
of January, 1912, at 2 o'clock p. in., in
the County Court room of this county
and state, at which time all parties in-
terested may appear and show cause, if
any there be, why this deed should not
he approved, to the following described
real estute situate in Mayes County, Ok-
lahoma, to-wit :
transfer! ed the Clever property
to Mr. McDan el on a basis of
*1,600 valuation, paying 1\ r the
Herald a cash difference of $500
and assuming some indebtedness.
To the new editor The Sun wish-
es nothing but unbounded suc-
cess. What Mr. McDaniei's fu-
Tlie northwest quarter of the ronth- , . ■
„ . ture plans are we are not advised,
west quarter or the southeast quarter ot
Section 2, and the south half of tlie I SinctJ our entiy into the newspa-
iiortheast quarter of the nortlieast qnar- ; per field here We have had OC-
ter of Section 19, and the south half of, casion, once or twice, to talk
the nortl.wMt quarter of the northwest | ..re;ll hateful" of and to Mr. Mc-
quarter and the northeast quarter of n • i 1 i i l. u
the northwest quarter of the northwest I Da,llel mwiaUy, he has
quarter and the west half of the south- i beet) pro.npt to reciprocate,
west quarter of the northwest quarter Withal, however, our rematksj
and the northeast quarter of the south- were prompted Solely by a de-
west quarter of the northwest quarter jsjre for Aversion and were with
of Section 30, Township
20 North
Range 20 Kast of the Indian llase and !
out personal animus. And we
Meridian, in MayesC'iuuty, Okla touia, assume thit this holds good on
contain ng 100 acres, more or less, at- Mr. McDailiel's part to SOllie ex-
cordiug to the United States survey j tent, at least. At any rate wher-
ever his future lines may be cast,
>#e trust they will be in pleasant
thereof.
It is further
ordered that notice of
this hearing be given by publication of^
this order twice in a uewspajier print*-jCplaces
in the City of Tahlequah, County of I , , ,
Cherokee, preceding the date of hearing a Pencl> and h*r mother asked
Done this 20th day oi December, lull. | her what she was doing. ,1 m
(Seal i
47 2
J. T. PARKS,
County Judge,
If the farmers of this country
get a shot at your nefarious bus-
iness they will knock it into hell
the first round.
When I get near to the home
of the drunkard who has turned
over a new leaf, I hear, "Be it
■ever so humble, there's no place
like home —without booze."
I'd rather be a devil in hell
serving pitch to my gang than
to be a man with a church rec-
ord and stand up for that dirty
rotten business.
Hell will be so full of church
members standing for the whis-
key gang that their feet will be
sticking out through the win-
dows.
If the man that gets drunk
goes to hell, Ihe church member
who voted for the saloon will go
to3, and I would like to fire the
furnace while the old scoundrel
is in there! ,
Fifty-four out of fifty-eight
lodges in America have kicked
the whiskey gang out. There
are only a few places like the
penitentiary and jail that are
welcome to Ithem.
Every foe that has ever aim-
ed against this government,
dared lift her head in defiance of
your country and mine, sir, has
tried to overthrow the country
that this flag represents, sir,
wriggled and crawled out of a
grog shop.
—*—o
Dr. Rogers, the potato king of
Fort Gibson, has sold his fine
residence cn Gartison Hill and
will move to T^xas, where he
will g> into the potato business,
having leased 700 acres of land
for that pOrpose near Eagle
Lake. Dr. Rogers is a good man
and universally liked, and v 1
be misse i here. He will com-
mence planting potatoes about
the first of January. New Era.
STRAY BITS OF HUMOR
The editor of an exchange,
who had spent a nighc out with
the boys, arose the following
morning and prepared this one:
'If the moon had a baby would
the sky-rocket?" The editor
was stity alive when last heard of.
drawing a picture of God," said
the little uirl. "You can't do
that." said the shocked mother.
, "People have never geen G°d,
and don't know what he looks
like." "Well" replied the little
girl, proceeding with her artistic
labors, "they'll know when I get
done,
"Soft Soap" is the text of a
lay sermon in the Burton Free
Ltnce. "In his house-moving
! operations,'' says the Fr^e Lane?,
A traveling man in Wichita "Parson Reed discovered that
asked the negro who runs the soft soap under the skids was the
elevator in the Carey Hotel if he proper stuff. Soft soap, Brother
didn t get tired of his job. No, is the greatest thing on
sah," replied the negro, deliber- eanh. Thin old world would
ately. Ah always did like to have gone kerflunk ages ago had
travel. ' not been for soft SOap. All
successful polititions carry large
|A wasp stung 3-year-old Mi!- cargoes of sofr soap. 1'olitics is
dred on the hand, then flew away, soft soap ! Diplomacy is soft
Mildred's mother in swift pur- Soap! Congratulations arc soft
soap! Courtship is soft soap!
suit. Through her tears she1
called: Men have gone to Congress, and
Oh. mamma, let him fly have reached the presidential
through ths air and c jol his feet; chair on soft soap alone. All
they are so hot'" hot air artis s use soft soap. If
1 there is anything on eartli that
A little girl was toiling with ; [)eals s?!1 soa^ we have failed to
hear of it.
1
A SQUARE DEAL
IN GROCERIES
Below we quote you a few of the many bargains in the
Square Deal Grocery; others can be seen by visiting our
store:
14 lbs Granulated Sugar ti.IK)
Hest Dry Salt Meat )ier lb ll'jc
Lard, per lb 10c
Laundry Soap. « liars for 25c
Cabbage, per l'j 08c
Onions, |>er lb 04c
We invite you to call and look over our "ig Bargain val-
ues in Good Things to Eat
Square Deal Grocery
Herman Wolff, Prop.
^■BBSSnBnaaHBBOBKSSSS
While in the throes of a spasm
Christines Day, the lit le girl of
W. B. Mearis and wife of the
north part.of town, fell from the
bed into a tub of boilini wattr
placed nearby by the motht r pre-
paratory to bathing the little one.
The toother had gone after a
bucket of cqld water to lower the
temperature of the water in the
tub. and on her return, seeing
the child in the tub presence of
mind deserted her and before
the child was taken from the
tub by the men att: acted by the
cries of the frantic mother it was
so badly scalded that death end-
ed its sufferings in a short time.
To th1 state bacteriologist Dr.
McDaniela sent a specimen of the
faeces of one of his patients for
examination for hookworm, Dr. I
McDanjtls says the patieut, ihe
s not parents in destitute cir-
cumstances and a nephew, by
the way,, of Gov. Bob Taylor of
Tennessee—shows all thesymp-f
toms as set forth in the text
books bearing on the subject.
Champ Cla.'k opened his presi-
dential cambaign at ^Guthrie,
Thursday night, li s talk didn't
help anybody in the county as
ievery tax receipt will plainly,
show.
NEGRO Hi WHilt
GO TO PEN FOR LIFE
The trial of William Irwin, the
Muskogee rtal estate dealer,
which ended in his sentence to
the pen for life for the killing of
the two little negro children at
Taft last March, was fallowed by
I)0c Allen, the negro who placed
the dynamite under the house,
pleading w uilty to the charge of
murder and getting the same
: e itence. ,
Call on Cory & Ryals when
in need of feed and groceries.
They carry a fresh line of grocer-
ies and will show their apprecia-
tion of your patronage by selling
the goods right. North part of
town.
the telehone counts
in:all emergencies
It will summon the fire depart,
ment; it will call medical aid when the least delay
may mean death; ii will carry your cry for help to
the police.
<* %
A wonderful convenience for ordi
nary purposes it becomes of inestimable value in
times of emergency.
You need a telephone. Call our
Manager at No. 118 and order one installed.
Pioneer Telephone and
Telegraph Company
STOLEN!
Mr
From near Oktaha, Okla., a light-
bay horse Mule about 15 hands high,
coming 6 years old, GL on left shoulder, wire
mark on left hind leg. Bay mare about 7 yr.
old, 14 hands high, M on left shoulder, one-
eyed, wire mark across breast. Black Horse
141 hands high, 75 on left shoulder, white
in face, snip on nose, short-gaited pacer.
$10 a head will be paid to anyone who cap-
tures horses and notifies,
GENERAL LEWIS,
Oktaha,Okla,,
iwho will come and receive same.
Jah
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Tinch, Gus H. The Tahlequah Sun (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 48, Ed. 1 Monday, January 1, 1912, newspaper, January 1, 1912; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc123432/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.