The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 67, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 30, 1909 Page: 5 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
*
"1
THE NEW8, S MONTHS, 1.00.
THE SHAWNEE DAILY NEWS. SATURDAY, JANUARY
PflOF. ARTHUR H. GREENE
Musical Director and Organist Ba>
tlst White Temple. Oklahoma City.
Conductor Shawnee Glee Club.
VO'"E CULTURE, EXPRESSION IN
8INQINO.
Teaching In 8hawnee Tuesdays and
Wednesdays. Studio. 424 North Mar-
ket. Phone 230.
j LoC£
Local News
Wanted to Lease
A modern house, close
in—address V. Hughes
in care Shawnee Newa.
READ BUSINESS PROPOSITION
TO BUSINESS MEN ON PAGE
ONE.
I have money to loan on choice
city and farm property. Address
Box 411. 30-12t
DREW-SELBY'3 LADIES' OX
FORDS—NEW ARRIVALS—$2.00 TO
$4.00. MADDEN & JARRELL.
Put the small man in a large place
and you can rest assured there
going to be something doing.
READ BUSINESS PROPOSITION
TO BUSINESS MEN ON PAGE
ONE.
A Kickapoo land case of Brown
and Chapman vs Brookover is being
heard before jury in McKenzie's court
this afternoon.
Half a lie is
whole que.
no better than a
is to a
"flh t? J
\L/
tusamr
Many a large idea originates in a
•email Ihead.
*'Q" Baggage Une. Phone 777. lm
W. J. Murphy of Fort Simth Is a
Shawnee visitor.
A man seems to inherit all sorts of
troubjefi—except money.
One may be as good as the next—
in a barber shop.
Ladles' ready-to-wear goods at
big reduction. Smyth, 5 West Main
street. 23-7t
C. H. Eckford left today for Mem
phis, Tennv, on business and to visit
relatives. He will also probably visit
his old home in Mississippi before
returning to Shawnee.
Would you appreciate a cigar that
would lift your weight of care? If
•o. smoke White Seal 6c cigar. 4-tf
Shawnee Is all right;
White Seal cigar.
J. H. Wahl is indisposed with a
•touch of La Grippe.
Mrs. W. E. Hussellman of Sapulpa
is a Shawnee visitor.
It worries a woman when she ex-
pects bad news and it doesn't show
up.
SPRING OPENING OF LADIES'
OXFORDS. MADDEN & JARRELL.
READ BUSINESS PROPOSITION
TO BUSINESS MEN ON PAGE
ONE.
$7,000 Dollars buys one of the
nicest homes and five acres, all in
fruit in Shawnee. W. E. Husselman.
27-6t
All men are born free and equal;
then their equality takes a vacation
until the undertaker gets busy with
them.
Any Ladies' Coat In the house at
half-price. Smyth, 6 West Main.
23-7t
A MANLY APOLOGY FOR
TECUMSEH'!! ABUSE
The McLoud Observer makes
amends for a foolish article publish-
ed last week and incidentally takes
a fall out of the Tecumseh campaign
committee as follows:
'Last week, through an oversight
on our part, an article was publish-
ed, under the caption, "Who Are
They?", in which unwarranted
tacks and charges were made on the
characters of three citizens of Shaw
nee—Messrs. Victor Harlow, S. P.
Freellng and Sidney J. Roy,—furnish
ed us In copy from the Tecumseh
campaign committee, and we take
this method of making an unsolicited
retraction. It has been our effort
to at all times keep our pages free
of all "Mud-slinging" and other de-
famatory jiatter, even through the
heat of a political campaign and it
was with regret that we discovered,
when too iate, that the article refer-
red to had appeared. The contest
between Tecumseh and Shawnee for
the county seat is a business propo-
NEW8 WANT AD8 PAY WELL.
IN WRATH OVER POOR
SHOW.
HAD TOO
MUCH
INTELLIGENCE.
It takes a born diplomat to appear
to be interested in other people's
troubles.
I he size of the fund has a good
deal to do with the fundamental prin-
ciple of success.
White Seal is a cigar for
classes and masses.
both
4-tf
It's usually the bridesmaids who
weep at the wedding. The bride does
her tear-shedding later.
Bven if you don't tell a girl she
is pretty when she Isn't she knows
it's because you are bashful.
"Q" Baggage Line. Phone 777.
lt-lm
When a man realizes that he has
been done it doesn't do him much
good to feel that he is undone.
Nothing takes the point out of a
joke so much as for somebody else
to get it off ahead of you.
During courtship the woman admits
that the man in the case is her su-
perior. but after marriage she admits
her mistake.—Chicago News.
JUST ARRIVED—OUR SPRING
LINE OF LADIES' OXFORDS, PAT-
ENTS, VICI, TAN, OXBLOOD IN
ALL THE NEW DAINTY LASTS.
MADDEN & JARRELL.
The thing that scares a woman to
death is to think what an awful thing
it would be for her baby to be drown-
ed in the bath tub if she had a baby.
—New York Press.
500 PAIR OF THIS SPRING'S
NEWEST DESIGNS AND LAST IN
LADIES' OXFORDS—JUST ARRIV-
ED. MADDEN & JARRELL. 23-6t
There's hardly anything seems so
extravagant to a man as to ride in
a cab instead of a street car if it's
with any of his own family.
No Politics in Campaign.
The one pleasant feature about
the present campaign is that the sup
porters of each of the two candidates
have shown no disposition to bring
this contest into politics. Their ac-
tions are indeed commendatory. No
man or set of men who have the in-
terest and welfare of their party at
heart will ever consent to bringing
their party's interest in a matter
which is not a political matter. We
have every assurance from the party
leaders of each of the three parties,
the Democratic, Republican and So-
cialist, residing in and around Shaw
nee, that they will, undo** no circum-
stances, permit this question to enter
into their organizations or to be
made a party issue in any event.
We are also assured by the mem-
bers of the Chamber of Commerce
and by those who have Shawnee's
campaign in charge, that they will
not countenance or permit If in their
power to prevent the making of this
question a political matter.
Being acquainted with many of the
Tecumseh gentlemen of each of the
political parties we can safely say to
the voters of Pottawatomie county
that they are too fair minded to make
a political issue of this campaign.
Shawnee will present her claims
and arguments to the people from a
purely non-partisan standpoint and
free from personal abuse. We do not
believe in a campaign of vituperation,
condemnation and individual slander.
We think that the voters of Pottawa-
tomie county are too Intelligent to
give countenance to such a campaign.
Tecumseh's business men, said to
the commissioners: threaten the vo-
Mexlcan Audiences Evidently Lack
Patience of Americana.
Here Is a news item the like of
which one does not find in the news-
papers of the United States. It comes
from the City of Mexico and describee
the exciting incident at Queretaro:
"Yesterday's bullfight.' the reader
la informed, "was wretched, and start-
ed a row. The management announced
that the bulls would be first-class, but
those which appeared were very small
and showed no fight whatever. Four
of these ridiculous beasts were sent
back to the corral, another barely
qualified, and only one turned out to
be a real bull.
'The public, unable to repress Its
indignation, laid hold of everything it
could get Its hands on and threw It
into the bull ring, causing serious
damage
"In the midst of the excitement the
announcement was made that the
management had been fined $100, but
this was not sufficient to allay the
public Indignation The manager of
the bull ring waa compelled to hide
owing to the fact that some of the
most excited individuals in the audi
ence were making a diligent search
for him.
"It was a tremendoua row, as we re
marked before, and would have had
more serious consequences had not
the Fifth corps of rural police ar-
rived on the scene moat opportunely.
The policemen made the discontented
audience disperse, and then mounted
guard over the bull ring and the resi-
dence of the manager."
CHANCE FOR SETTLEMENT GONE.
Basso Might Have Decided Vexed
Queation, But He Didn't.
The choir began the hymn. When
they came to the line: "Neither are
they afraid," the composer of the
music had so written it that it had to
be repeated first by the soprano, then
by the alto, and finally by the bass.
The soprano seemed to be of conserva
tive taste and sang the line: "Nee-ther
are they afraid." Apparently the alto
had departed from the usage of her
forefathers, for when Bhe brought out
the words they became "Nl-ther are
they afraid." and it became a serious
question which side the bass would
take. The bass was an Irishman. Out
rolled his rich voice: "Nav-ther are
they afraid."
So the question of usage still re-
mained unsettled.
Usefulness of Marvelous Incubators
Ended by "Scrap."
"Speaking about incubators,'*
•irawled old Jeff Weatherby, In the
back of Jason's general store, "re-
mains me of the wonderful chicken
hatchers built by the Halns boys. Rill
Hains invented the most marvelous
Incubator ever seen in these parti.
It not only hutched the chickens out,
but it actually shielded the little
chicks from a hawk just like an old
hen. Then Pete Hains got busy and
went one better. He built an incu-
bator with a phonograph arrange-
ment that would 'cluck-cluck' to the
chicks and scratch up worms for
them."
"Whew!" gasped I he starch drum
mer "I have heard a lot of yarns,
but that is the limit. What hecams
of these wonderful incubators?"
"Rusted, stranger, busted all to bits.
You see them thar incubators were so
intelligent they soon grew jealous of
one another and first thing you know
there was a scrap to equal any game
chicken fight that ever come off. When
it was over both were only fit for the
Junk heap. Thanks, stranger. I'll
take a cigar."
(the puces of worship]
To Pastor, and Ministers
Notices regarding Sunday aervices
tuuat be in the office not later than
Saturday morning at twelve o'clock
In order to insure their publication
on Saturday. What would be better
still would be to hand them In on
Friday afternoon which coufa be
done as well as not
The Wise Fly.
In a lecture on flies before the Royal
Photographic society of London, F. P
Smith said that with a little patience
files could be trained, and he showed
some cinematograph records of flies
lying on their backs twirling tniniji
ture dumb-bells, balancing weights
bigger than themselves, climbing re-
volving wheels, and acting as nurse-
maids, holding dummy babies. Ac-
curately balanced little machines
were used for training the flies, and
the only discomfort to the insect, said
the lecturer, was involved in its being
imprisoned for a day or t wo. On being
released, although its wings were
The Cemetery Association will
meet Monday at the home of Mrs.
Rowland's on North Broadway at
p. m.
Go to Newman's for estimates on
gas fitting, 125 North Bell. 23-lm
The rea on a girl can always make
a fool of a man is she let's him think
he is making one of her.
Ladles' Knit Underwear, at a big
reduction. Smyth, E West Main St
IJ-7t
W. H. Crowder of the Shawnee Mu-
tual has returned from a business
trip to various points in the state
READ BUSINESS PROPOSITION
TO BUSINESS MEN ON PAG
ONE.
When a woman's face is her for-
tune she should have no difficulty
in getting through life on her cheek.
White Seal cigar Is made
man, not molly- >ddles.
E. C. Swisher accepted a position
as bookkeeper with the Roesch
Plumbing Co.
Smoke the White Seal cigar—the
great after-meal cigar. 4-tf
Three vags, one drunk and three
lewd conduct cases were heard in
police court this morning
This is the last day of the open
season for quail hunting and as a
consequence many nlmrods arc hrav-
Conkey's Laying Tonic going fast, iag th„ wind and eol<J fm (he ,agt
at Clarke & Keller's. Poultrymen I tlni() this wjnter
'ake advantage of free offer.
Extensive improvements have been
made in the Shawnee Drug Store,
Leverenz & Co., proprietors, at the
corner of Main and Broadway. The
rear of the store room has been fine
ly equipped in order to give more
room for the prescription department,
the great increase in the business or
the store making this move neces
sary.
Shawnee Lodge No.
27 A. F. and A. M
will hold a regular
communication for
transaction ofbusines
Mod. eve., Feb.l, at
8:00 sharp.
^ isiting brethren welcome.
J. F. Ball.
h. g. Newcombe, Sec'y.
Newman nas the cheapest line of
gas stoves in the city, 125 North
Bell street 23-lm
"Anti-Graft" is the editorial cap-
tion of Don Lawhead of the Wewoka
Democrat.
Longmire-Oraper Co
UNDERTAKING
Night Phones 119 & :39
MRS. GORDON WILLIAMS,
-IB South Philadelphia, Phone 866,
Is handling Spirella Corsets. Old
customers can re-order, new custom-
ers solicited.
READ BUSINESS PROPOSITION
TO BUSINESS MEN ON PAGE
ONE.
FOR SALE—Cheap ray residence,
034 North Broadway. Residence
I phone 644; office G5T. Geo. P. Nelson.
30-6t
(o.. „|.V U . W. . I lnJured. II had no desire to flv, but
ters with bonded indebtedness. Thenj showed tractableness and readiness to
it was that the commissioners threat-1 perform these extraordinary gyra
ened the people who electd them, tions instead.
that if they did not vote for Tecum-,
seh, they (the commissioners) would
bankrupt the county by issuing bonds. J
Mr. Taxpayer, what do you think of
this?
First class shoe shining for five
cents at Exdls & Pappas, 109 North
Broadway. 25-1 m
BECKER THEATER
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4th
LINCOLN J. CARTER'S
Play of Today
A Good Woman
^flLL
IN
The Best of Many Carter Successes
A THRILLING STORY WELL TOLD
Abounding in Comedy and Strong
Heart Interest.
Good Women Should See This.
That Means All Women Will See
PRICES 25c, 50c, 75c.
The Tenor's Compliment.
You could tell from his hair that he
was a musician, or something of the
sort. "Yes." he said to the company
at large, "the greatest tenor In the
land once paid me the biggest compli-
ment I could wish." "Oh?" remarked
some one, interrogatively. "It was
like this: I sang without accompani-
ment—I always have trouble with
accompanists; they're so unsympathet-
ic, you know—and at the end of the
song he said to me: 'Do you know,
when you began without an accom
panlst, I was surprised: when I heard
you, I was astonished; and when you
sat down I was delighted!'" And the
sun shone down and lit up the youth's
beatific smile of satisfaction.
FEW DIAMONDS ARE SMUGGLED.
Amount So Brought In His No Effect
on the Market.
"Very few diamonds are smuggled
Into this country now. whatever may
have been the case in former days."
declared an agent of a large Jewelry
house who makes a yearly trip to Eu-
rope to purchase precious stones. " Th •
amount that is brought in without
duty Is so small at* to have no effect
on the market. Uncut diamonds are
not taxed. The duty on cut stones Is
but ten per cent Amsterdam. Holland.
Is the great market for diamonds.
Nearly all the New York dealers who
import buy from that city. Eighty per
cent, of the diamond cutting for the
world is done in Amsterdam. Few
small diamonds are cut in New York
city. There are almost no facilities
here for doing the work. The expe-
rienced cutters at Amsterdam can turn
out the work cheaper than It can be
done on this side of the water even
when the customs duty is added to the
rates paid the Holland manufacturer*.
Large diamonds, about three-quarters
of a carat, are cut here, hut most of this
work Is recuttlng for the changes ti
style of setting."
Surprise for Lodge-Keeper.
II was a former grclibishop of York
—Dr. Thomson— who appeared once In
the role of coachman. He had at-
tended an evening party, and, on leav-
ing the house, discovered that hl«
coachman was drunk. There apeared
nothing for it but to drive home him-
self, and the archbishop, after placing
the smiling but unconscious coachman
Inside the carriage, mounted the box
and took the reins. The monotony of
the homeward Journey was broken by
a wheel of the carriage coming into
violent collision with a stone just out-
side the entrance to Hlshopsthorpe.
The lodge-keeper, unable to recog-
nize the approaching linure in tha
darkness, called out cheerllyj "Hallo,
Bill, drunk again!—antl blowed if you
ain't got the old cock's hat on!" "It's
the old cock himself," gravely re
sponded his grace.—San Francisco Ar-
gonaut.
The First Methodist Episcopal Church
Beard and Ninth.
Sunday school at 9:45 a. m.
Preaching at 11 a. m. Sermon
"The Divine Ideal of Service."
Class meeting _t 12 m.
Epworth League at 6:30 p. m.
Preaching at 7:30 p. m. Sermon
"The Keystone of the Arch of Time.
Mid-week servlc., Wednesday at
7'.30 p. m.
All are made welcome.
G. W. MARTIN, Pastor.
First daptist Church.
Corner Ninth and Union.
Sunday school 10 a. m.
Morning service at 11 a. m. •
Mission 8. S. East Town at 3 p. m.
Junton Union, 3 p. m.
Senior Union, 6:30 p. m.
Evening service at 7:30 p. m.
Everybody invited.
L. C. WOLFE,
Pastor.
First Church of Christ, Scientist.
Carnegie Library.
Sunday school at 10 a. m.
Sunday service, 11 a. m.
The Wednesday evening testimonial
meeting, 7:30 p. m.
All are cordially Invited to attend
these services.
The reading room la open dally, ex
cept Sunday, from 2 unrtll 6 p. m.
Horton Memorial Church.
Corner of Wallace and Park street.
Sunday school at 9:45 a. m.
Church service 11 a. m.
C. E. Society, 6:45.
Church service, 7:30.
We try to make everybody want to
come again.
When Beef Went Up.
The rlBe in beef took a humorous
turn recently. The Fulton Eye, ac
cording to the Atlanta Constitution,
tells this story of It:
"A shorthorn bull walked Into the
door of the Farmers' bank last Thura
day morning and climbed to the top
of the stairway, much to the surprise
of the doctors, who occupy the offices
above. The animal found room to
turn around at the top of the stairs
and came down again. It is presumed
that the animal was looking for Dr
Ward, the veterinary surgeon, and
climbed the wrong stairway by mis-
take"
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5th
MARX S. NATHAN PRESENTS
The Best of All Political Plays
GEO. ADE'S COMEDY DRAMA
The
County
hairman
Successful Play of Love and Poli-
tics Bristling with Brilliant Wit.
PRICES—5#c, 75c, $1, $1.50.
Books to Read.
The remark as to Macaulay being "a
very common sort of book buyer, who
always bought books to read, which
Sir George Trevelyan tells us, email
ated from the late Bernard Quarltch.
recalls an anecdote related by Lock
er-Lampson in "My Confidences." Bed
ford, emperor of Morocco, once sent
me home a little binding which I con
sldered unsatisfactory—the volume did
not shut properly; it gaped When I
pointed out this grievous defect, his
only remark was: "Why, bless me. sir,
you've been reading it! "
Learning All the Secrets.
Husband—Why were you so anx-
ious to get that maid? She does not
seem to be efficient
Wife—Shf isn't.
Husband—Then what did you en-
gst.- her 'or'.'
v " 'a« -d in every family
lu the neighborhood.
Quaint Old Pepys.
There were worse errors than the
mutlnee hat for the man who sat be-
hind a woman in the seventeenth cen-
tury theater. Pepys wrote that Janu-
ary 28. 1661, he saw "The Lost Lady"
for the second time. Nine days ear-
lier that play had not pleased him
much—partly, perhaps, because he
was "troubled to be seen by four of
our office clerks, which sat In the
half-crown box, and I In the Is, 6d."
But on the second occasion the play
did "please me better than before;
and here, I sitting behind in a dark
place, a lady spit backward upon me
by a mistake, not seeing me." How-
ever, It was all right, for, "after se
Ing her to be a very pretty lady, |
was not troubled at it at all."
St. Benedict Church,
Regular services at St. Benedict
church, corner of St. Benedict and
Kickapoo streets, evory Sunday. 8 a
m., low mass; 10 a. a., high mass.
Special good music.
FATHER BLAISE
Pastor.
Unsatisfactory Experiment.
There is a couple In Atchison knowa
to be engaged to be married. The man
was recently called out of town on
an important business trip, and no
sooner reached his destination, 50#
miles away, than he received a tele-
eram from his girl to return at one*.
He did so and found she had sent tha
telegram to "try" him, to see If h«
would do anything" for her, as ha
had claimed. She is satisfied now that
he loves her, but he isn't quite satis-
fied when lie thinks of the worry and
expense that he was put to, and will
ask to be released from the engage
ment.—Atchison Olobe
Historical-Relic.
The visitors in the historical muse-
urn gazed curiously at a small feather
pillow which nestled in a glass case.
I don't see anything unusual about
that pillow,'' remarked one of the visl
tors, turning to the guide.
"It's a very valuable pillow," re
plied the guide That is Washing-
ton s original headquarters."—Lippln-
COtt'8.
First Presbyterian Church.
9th and Bell Streets.
Sunday, January 31, 1909.
Morning Services:
Sabbath School. 9:45 a. m. Men's
Bible Class in Dr. Wells' office.
11 a. m., hour of worship.
Sermon, "A life that was dead in
earnest."
Solo by Mrs. Jessie Reed.
C. E. at 6:30 p. m.
7:30 p. in., preaching service.
Sermon, "The Prophet of Fire."
Special music.
Prayemeeting service in church at
:30 p. m., Wednesday evening.
Ladies' Bible Meeting, Thursday
evening in the Manse, February 4th.
Ladies Aid Society with Mrs. Will-
ard Johnston, Tuesday 3 p. m.. Feb-
ruary 2nd.
All cordially invited to all services,
8. A. FULTON, Pastor.
Christian Church.
Corner Broadway ucd Eleventh.
Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. a class
with a good teacher for all. We are
In a contest with Edmund. Come and
help.
Communion and preaching, 11 a. m.
Evangelistic services, 7:30 p. m.
Teachers' training class, Tuesday,
7:30 p. m.
Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7:30
p. m.
Everyone Invited to all our serv-
ices.
FRANK L. VAN VOORHIS,
G. A. R. Member*.
The local members of the o. A. R.
are preparing for the celebration of
Lincoln's birthday, the 100th anniver-
sary of his birth, February 12. Tneir
arrangements are being made in
conformity with plans of the com-
mittee on arrangements for the cele-
bration of the 100th anniversary of
Abraham Lincoln, chosen at the last
national encampment of the G. A. R
The local celebration will be held
either at the Becker Theatre or at
the Christian church. Arrangements
have not yet been fully completed,
but good speakers will be present.
The program as at present outlined
will be as follows:
Music (Instrumental.)
Invocation.
"America", by the audience.
Vocal music (Solo or Glee Club.)
Address (Life and character of
Lincoln.
"Star Spangled Banner," by the
audience.
Gettysburg address.
"Nearer My God to Thee," by the
audience.
Doxology, by the audience.
Benediction.
The committee has recommended
that the following program be ob-
served In the public schools:
1. Keller's American Hymn.
2. Invocation.
"Almighty Father: Humbly we
bow before Thee, our Creator, Guide
and Preserver. We thank Thee for
what faith makes real to us; Thine
almighty power that created the hea-
vens and the earth and all things
that are therein; the hot* ldlesa lore
that environs Thy children and
moves them reverently to say'Our
Father.' We thank Thee for the
the noble men under whose leader-
ship this fair land was dedicated to
freedom of thought, expression and
action; to their successors who have
given themselves to solving grave
problems arising from changing con-
ditions. At this hour we would spec-
ially thank Thee, that in the time
of the country's dire peril a man was
sent of Thee equal to the emergency.
We pray, our Father, that these evi-
dences of Thy love and goodness
and these examples of noble doing,
may Inspire ub all to attempt to live
unselfishly, and to do our duty as
far as In us lies according to tne
precepts of Thy Holy Word, and to
Thee we give all the honor and
praise, now and forever more. Amen."
3. "Battle Hymn of the Republic,"
(Solo with chorus.)
4. Sketch of Abraham Lincoln.
D. Lincoln's Gettysburg address.
6. Centennial Hymn (j. q. Whit-
tler.)
7. Extracts and Quotations from
the Writings and Speeches of Lin-
coln. (Selectod by Pupils.)
"Star Spangled Banner," by
audience
9. Address (Life and character of
Lincoln.)
10. "America," by audience.
11. Benediction.
The greatest of all newspapers Is
the DAILY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT, of
3t Louis. It has no equal or rival
In all the west and ought to be in
the hands of every reader of any
Dally paper. It costs, by mall, post-
age prepaid, DAILY, INCLUDING
SUNDAY, one year, $6.00; 6 months
$3.00; 3 months $1.50; DAILY,
WITHOUT SUNDAY, one year,
$4.00; g montU *2.00; 3 months.
$1.00; SUNDAY EDITION—a big
newspaper and magazine combined,
48 to 756 pages every Sunday, one
year, $2.00; 6 months, $1.00. A sub-
cription for the GLOBE-DEMO-
CRAT, at these prices, Is the best
possible newspaper Investment 8end
your order TODAY, or write for
FREE SAMPLE COPY to Olobe
Printing Company, St. Louis, Mo.
See special offer of the "Twlce-a-
Week" Issue of the GLOBB-DEMO-
CRAT, TWO YEAR8 FOR $1.26,
elsewhere la this paper.
THE NEWS, 10c PER WEEK.
New Light on Evolution.
"Your clothes seem a trifle large
for you," remarked the abrupt pei*
sou.
Yes," answered the young maa
with college hair. "Sometimes I think
Darwin didn't know what he was tali
ing about The tendency to-day seems
i 1 • toward the survival of th* mla-
flttcst!"
tv L. VAN VOORHIS, TUn C 1 e C a I
uiout.r : lite secret of Secrets •
STOKE ADVERTISING! j
Beard 8treet Presbyterian Church.
(Southern.)
Services In temporary chapel, cor-
ner Beard and Rldgewood streets.
Sunday school. 9:46 a. m.
Preaching 11:00 a. m.
Subject: "Thr Duty of Confessing
Christ."
Preaching, 7:30 p
"Repentance.''
J. M. Clark, Pastor.
subject: —
BILLIE WISE.
The Baggage Man— calls answer-
ed to any part of the city, checis
for baggago etc. Phone 1236. J-23 i
3 LINES, 3 TIMES, 28 CENTS.
On display In the east show win-
dow of the Fit-Well store Is an im-
mense pair of Regal shoes, which a
card attached informs the gazer were
manufactured for Capt. Geo. Augur,
the celebrated giant.
Don't fall to see Newman for es-
timates on your plumbing, 126 N.
Bell street. 23-lm
J One of the wisest of men
• wrote:
, "Suffer any person to tell
; us his story, morning and even-
ing, for but a twelve-month,
AND HE WILL BECOME OUR
MASTER!"
In the above aentence we
have, la a nutshell, the INNER-
MOST SECRET OF SUCCESS-
FUL ADVERTISING—frequency
and persistency and unvarying •
continuity In the telling of the 1
story of the store or enter-
Prise. There are many other
things to be said of aucceaa-
ful advertising, but In the
above quotation Is found the
real philosophy, the real secret.
The Heart of the Whole
Matter
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.
The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 67, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 30, 1909, newspaper, January 30, 1909; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc138590/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.