The Hugo Husonian (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 24, 1914 Page: 3 of 8
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It Always Helps
says Mrs Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky„ in
ton rng^Jer expflnce wi.,.hn Cardui> the woman's
tonic. She says further: Before 1 began to use
Cardu my back and head would hurt so bad I
thought the pain would kill me. 1 was hardly able
of Cardui °l h7i?MaA,ter ,aking ^ee bottles
ot Lardui, I began to feel like a new woman. I soon
S?!lSi pt)un sv?nd now-' do a11 my housework,
as well as run a big water mill.
1 wish every suffering woman would give
CAEftDUl
The Woman's Tonic
a trial. I still use Cardui when I feel a little bad,
and it always does me good."
Headache, backache, side ache, nervousness,
ill* WK?rn-°cUt fcell,ngs> etc- are sure signs of woman-
ly trouble. Signs that you need Cardui, the woman's
tonic. You cannot make a mistake in trying Cardui \
for your trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing
women for more than fifty years.
Get a Bottle Today!
DUNCAN I. PURDUE
LED MOST USEFUL LiFE
SERVED HIS STATE IN ARMV OF
CONFEDERACY AND LATER
PIONEERED IN TEXAS
Noted For His Charritie. and Made
U«e of Hi Meant in MoC. Wonder-
ful Manner
*
No. 666
PreP««l wpeeUlly
£°r MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER
Five or tiz doiei will break any cue and
A liken then at a tonic the Fever will not
■elurn. It act« on the liver belter than
calomel and doe* not gripe or aickco. 25c
Issued License to Wed
The following marriage licenses
have been issued: Steve Battiest
(24) to Miss Lela Furlong (21) both
of Boswell; Zeno Spring (24) to .Miss
Dora L. Griffin, (17) both of Forney.
FARM LOANS 5,7,10 YEARS
Surras wl11
The Hugo Farm Mortage Co.
O. A. Simons, Pres. V. Bronaugh, Sec.
Office in Darrough Building
Get A Rig
Pure Bred Poland China Hogs, all
sizes and all prices. You can
make your selection from 4o head
Will sell for one half price to
framers in Choctaw County
CARL KRAUTER
The funeral services ov«.v rha re-
ii'tiins of the late Duncan T. Pardue
.vili (c-cur from the family residence,
-'17 Kast Jackson street, Sunday aft
ernoon at 2::it> o'clock, oinhic-rl oj
the Rev. W. W. Aruistrsn.; of the
First .Methodist rhurch. Interment
will follow at the Mt. Olivet ceme-
tery.
Duncan T. I'ardue, who died at the
family home Friday morning, was a
pioneer, not only in Oklahoma, hut of
Texas, where he went Just after he
had served three yars as a soldier
of the defeated Confederacy. He was
born at Blloxi, Miss., in 1839, a son of
William E. Pardue, He attended the
University of Mississippi and_ the
medical department of Tulane, later
taking postgraduate courses at Balti-
more. He enlisted in the Confeder-
ate army hospital service and rose
to the rank of surgeon, serving three
full years. He moved to Texas after
the war. settling near McKinney and
acquired large tracts of land. In 1884
he retired from active practice when
he moved to McKinney and engaged
in the lumber business. Afterwards
he organized the McKinney Tele-
phone plant and Ice & Power com-
pany.
At his father's death he became
the head of the family and educated
several of his nieces and nephews.
In addition he gave to those in no
wise related a home and educated
several young men and women. He
had four brothers and two sisters,
all of whom are dead. In 1889 he
married Laura Mitchell, and two chil-
dren, Mrs. David A. Stovall of this
city and Horace M„ of Kansas City,
Mo., are the result of that marriage.
He joined the Masonic lodge in 1880.
He came of ore of the old Louisiana
I rcnch families, tiis ancestors set-
tling in New Orleans prior to the
colonies of the Atlantic states secur-
ing their freedom from Great Britain.
The family has since been scattered,
only two near relatives surviving Dr.
Pardue aside from his immediate fam-
ily—a nephew, William Pardue, is an
attorney at San Antonio, Texas, and
another nephew, Charles Pardue, is
vice-president of the Wells-Fargo ex-
press company of New Orleans, La.
Since his residence in this city Dr.
Pardue has led a retired life. He
was known for his courtesy and his
extreme love for that which was
good.
"'tim nip
m/umtliild tfitifdj o
V/E ARE LONui ON PRODUCTJOI^
8HORT ON DISTRIBUTION.
BONDS WAS GIVEN
A LIFE SENTENCE
Southeastern Oklahoma Im-
migration Company
Realestrite, Farm Loans, Insurance and Bonding
List Your Realestate With us Forsal
Rentals Handled Under Bond. Special Bargains in Improv-
ed Farms.
Phone 75
Office 208 N. Broadway
Return Their Money If
"wncy ir
DR. HESS STOCK TONIC
Does Not Do As I Claim
A remarkable offer from Dr. Gilbert Hess (M D D V S)
o«r H.„" "n" - * " ■ *• * ">.
"S° .ure am I that Dr. He.. Stock Tonic will make stock
healthy and expel the worm., that I want you to urge your
customer, to buy it on the .trict und.r.tan,.i„g that ,f It
I'' them *nd Pay them we,|-t0 bri"9 back the
J """ ' "uthori" you t0 their
money. The firm of Dr. He.. A Clark ^11 protect you In
every ca,e. Under the same money-back guarantee you are
to .eli Dr. He.. Poultry Pan-a-ce-a to make poultry healthy
and help hen. lay and Dr. He.. M.tant Lou.e Killer to klH
lice on poultry and farm otock."
XJVL'SX! 8UPPl\°f th" *,,OVe' |,r0d,ltt9 on han<* ^d we
stand back of the guarantee which Dr. Hess has sent us.
Crescent Drug Store, Hugo, Ok la.
MURDERER OF MRS. S. A. YORK
ENTERED PLEA OF GUILTY AND
SENTENCED TO LIFE IMPRIS-
ONMENT
Killing Occurred at York Home Near
Unger La.t July and Slayer Also
Wounded £«t the Time
Thomas Ponds, who last July shot
and killed .Mrs. S. A. York at the
home of the latter near Unger was
Thursday brought before Judge Har-
dy and he entered a plea of guilty to
murder and was sentenced to the
state prison for the remainder of his
life.
The killing of Mrs. York was one
of the county's most terrible trage-
dies. Bonds had gone to the York
home to call on a daughter of Mrs.
York, and when the girl ran from
him. he attempted to follow. The
mother placed herself between the
man and her daughter, and she was
shot down. .Later a posse shot York,
who had terrorized the Unger com-
munity for several hours. His in-
juries were not serious, and he was
brought to this city that night, since
which time he has been In the county
jail. He is a young man and came
to the I'nger community from Fort
Smith. He had served for three years
in I he United States navy and was
dismissed from the service at Ports-
mouth. X. H„ about two years ago.
By Peter Radford
Lecturer National Farmer..' Union.
The economic distribution of farm
products is today tha world's greatest
problem and the war, while it ha*
brought its hardships, has clearly em-
phasized the importance of distribu-
tion as a factor In American agricul-
ture and promises to give the farm-
ers the co-operation of the govern-
ment and the business nv:n the
solution of their marketing problem.
This result will, in a measure, com-
pensate us for our war losses, for the
business interests and government
have been in the main assisting al-
most exclusively on the production
side of agriculture. While the depart-
ment of agriculture has been dumping
tons of literature on the farmer telling
him how to produce, the farmer has
been dumping tons of products in the
nation's garbage can for want of a
market.
The World Will Never Starve.
At no time since Adam and Eve
were driven from the Garden of Eden
have the inhabitants of this world
suffered from lack of production, but
some people have gone* hungry from
the day of creation to this good hour
for the Jack of proper distribution.
Slight variations in production have
forced a change in diet and one local-
ity has felt the pinch ot want, while
another surfeited, but the world as a
whole has ever been a land ot plenty.
We now have less than one-tenth of
the tillable land of the earth's surface
under cultivation, and we not only
hare this surplus area to draw on but
It is safe to estimate that in case of
dire necessity one-half the earth's
Population could at the present time
knock their living out of the trees
of the fcrest, gather it from wild
vines and draw it from streams. No
ine should become alarmed; the
world will never starve.
The consumer has always feared
that the producer would not yrnply
him and his fright has found expres-
sion on the statute books of our states
and nations and the farmer has been
urged to produce recklessly and with-
out reference to a market, and regard-
less cf the demands of the consumer.
Ba;k to the Soil.
The city people have been urging
each other to move back to the farm,
but very few of them have moved.
We w elcome our city cousins back to
the soil and this earth's surface con-
tains 16,092,160,000 idle acres of till-
able land where they can make a
living by tickling the earth with a
forked stick, but we do not need them
so far as increasing production is con-
cerned: we now have all the producers j
we can use. The city man has very
erroneous ideas of agricultural condi-
tions. The commonly accepted theory
that we are short on production is all
wrong. Our annual increase in pro-
duction far exceeds that of our In-
crease in population.
The World as a Farm.
Taking the world as one big farm,
we find two billion acres of land in
cultivation. Of this amount there is
approximately 750.000,000 acres on the
western and 1,260,000.000 acres on the
eastern hemisphere, in cultivation.
This estimate, of course, does not in-
clude grazing lands, forests, etc..
where large quantities of meat are
produced.
The world's annual crop approxi-
mates fifteen billion bushels of ce-
reals. thirteen billion pounds of fibre
and sixty-five million tons of meat.
The average annual world crop for
the past five years, compared with the
previous five years, is as follows:
Past Half Previous Half
Crops— Decade. Decade.
Corn (Bu.) 3,934.174.000 3,403,655.000
Wheat(Bu.) 3,522,769,000 3,257,526,000
Oats (Bu.) 4,120.017,000 3,508.315.000
Cotton (Bales) 19,863.800 17,541,200
The world shows an average in-
crease in cereal production of 13 per
cent during the past decade, compared
with the previous five years, while the
world's population shows an increase
of only three per cent.
The gain in production far exceeds
that of our increase in population, and
It is safe to estimate that the farmer
can easily increase production 25 per
cent if a remunerative market can be
found for the products. In textile
fibres the world shows an increase
during the past half decade in produc-
tion of 15 per cent against a popula-
tion increase of three per cent.
The peoplo of this nation should
address themselves to the subject of
Improved facilities for distribution.
The f iddl* of t/te Age*.
Gold is too -e tiigiily prized than any
other metal because it has the great
quality of b ;ing more uniformly use-
less. Other metals fluctuate more or
less in the degree of their usefulness
Gold continues on iu even way.
Bricks male from clay are for ail
practical purposes more useful than
gold. They can 1* made Into houses,
and nobody u<juld attempt to break
them off iiud carry them uwaj. If
bricks of gold were, however, employed
for tlils purpose no house would be
•afe. The owner of the house, if be
were a sound sleeper, would awake In
the morning to find the walls gone,
himself the center of an irreproachable
system of ventilation.
Gold Is like some .table people. If
has no special accomplishments. Thus
It never bores any one by it. presence.
You never hear any individual or aay
nation exclaim. 'I'm tired of bavins
so much gold around."
Gold i the greatest financial para-
dox in the world. Useless to sustala
life. it. very .tabillty makea It lend
Itself to the most widely varyln* pnr-
!"*<«•. Without It war wouM be a
failure, and so also peace.—Life. :
An Iron Coat.
Platlag iron with Iron ot teel with
Iron is a queer new scheme for delay-
ing rusting. Chemically pure Iron la
nearly rustproof; so the plating idea is
to cover iron or steel with iron that
ia as chemically pure as possible. Plat-
ing in much the same way that bras*
la plated with gold or nickel gives a
coat that is very close to pure Iron. A
coat of zinc over the coat of iron also
helps.
Rust is the bitterest and most per-
sistent eneuiy of this age or steel,
with its bridges and wires and sky-
acrapers and machines. The ancient
Hindus had a secret method of mak-
ing rustproof Iron, and much Iron 1a
now manufactured for special uses at
comparatively high cost which Is rea-
sonably free from impurities and so
less likely to give way to rust, but the
Inventor of completely rustproof, cheap
iron has a vast fortune awaiting blm
—Saturday Evening Post
Ever notice how often
• discarded newspapei
is turned to the "Classi-
fied Advertising" page?
®[ Want ads are among
the most thoroughly
used columns of tho
daily press.
? You can scarcely fail
of results whea you un
& classified ad.
•
• EDWIN A. ELLINGHAUSEN
• Attorney-at-Law
•
• Wright Bldg. Hugo, Ocla.
O. A. 8TOVALL
Attorney at Law
jprlag Building. Phone m.
a. M. Work. f. d. Coppfn,
WORK8 « COPPING,
Attorney, at Law.
Rooms 5 and 6 Darrough Euildln*
Long Sentences.
Buskin, it is said, has written more
aentences of Inordinate length than
any other classic writer of modern
English prose. Frederic Harrison some
years ago counted the words in a num-
ber of typical sentences, finding that In
the earlier books it was no uncommon
thing for Raskin to run beyond the
page before permitting himself and his
readers the relief of a full stop, but la
every case the sense is as clear as day
Wordsworth's poem on the "Charac-
ter of Happy Warrior" Is a notable ex-
ample of sustained connections. Apart
from the opening and closing couplets
the poem consists of two very long
compound Keutenees almost entirely
comprised of adjectival clauses The
longer of the two sentences contains
fifty-seven di-nsyliable lines. This to
probably a record in English versa.-
Dundee Advertiser.
**•***«*«**
* OR. C. A. THOMPSON *
* Dentist m
* Office in Vreeiand Building. ■
* HUGO, . - . OKLAHOMA •
• ***••
*****
• R. E. STEPHENSON *
* Attorney-at-Law *
Rooms 10-11 Darrough Build'ag *
HUGO, OKLAHOMA *
« * * * *
*** *•
■ « t •
PUBLIC HEALTH o
• DEPARTMENT •
• Conducted by Dr. J. C. Mahr, •
• State Commissioner of Health. •
.......
Stung.
He was evidently a very angry man.
and a a acquaintance hastened to ex-
press his sympathy.
When the angry man became coher-
ent he said: "1 was coming home in a
car and noticed h half dollar piece on
the floor. Xo one claimed it. I talked
it over with the conductor, and we took
a quarter each."
"Well." said the sympathizer, "half
a loaf, you know, is letter than no
bread."
"Certainly." said tile angry man.
"But 1 find now that I'm a quarter
abort."
The Word "Doll."
The word "doll" may be taken as
meaning the same thing as "idol"—
that is. an image-generally speaking,
an image of the human form. The
French word "poupee" and the Ger-
man "poupa" were derived from the
Latin "pupa." the word used for a
chrysalis (insect stage), the earUer
kinds of dolls being remarkably like
the pupae of insects. Our word pup-
pet Is derived also from the same root.
She Wanted ■ Title.
A title gives the rignt to embroider a
coronet on the body linen. It is pleas-
ant in a railway train to pour scent oa
a coroneted pocket handkerchief. La
Marechale Niel thought so, I dare say.
In the summer of 1859. Her husband
escaped the carnage of one of the bat-
tles fought that year in Lombardy.
He also assured against heavy odds
«nd the terrible blunders of the gea
eral staff victory to the French. Hto
wife was with him when his marshal's
baton was brought in with a letter
from Napoleon III. Niel thought Mme
Niel would have melted into tears from
Joy. Instead of that her mouth fell.
"You are marshal, you are." she said.
"That does not make me dnchess."—
London Truth.
• M. W. Gross R. E. Rowelt* •
* GROSS & ROWELLS •
Attorneys-at-Law
Office in Blakeney Builtung •
• •••••
8TEWART A McDONALD
Attorney, at Law
a 3, 4 and 5 Stewart Building
160 Acres
For Sale
One mile west of Spencer
ville. Price $1,200. $600
cash, $600 on long time.
For further information
see or write,
Simmons & Bronaugh
Hugo, Okla.
OTGRESTtL^'"
DIAMOND
'■ ran:
IADIHS f
Ou r-production and crop mortgage
force the farmers Into ruinrfus com-
petition with each other. The remedy
lies in organization and in co-opera-
tion In marketing.
yonr llru>.-hl , -
blAMONI; It! ANI> J\ ' ■ ■ , , /J I
Gold tacu:.;. i.. v-t . S""/A |
*ibl*>n. Ta.;.- .. " \-r '
Bnuortut an.1 „•; ,,r v \ '
• 1amono ii r: v > it
ye.jr.ttr.rde.:
SOLO BY ALL [.".U6GI8TS
FVERYW; - tV
That w« Not in HI. Ltr>*
tn&n who learns many la>
does not always enlarge hit
Bird. A porter In a Swiss hotel who
ipoko many language, with equal fa
clMty and inaccuracy, was once asked
*2 ?"-• n*UTe tongue. Ha r*
plied that he did not know, but that
fio spoke all ia-ncuages. "But in wha:
language do you thinkr asked U.
persistent que.tioner. "I neva tlafc*
Pronu-1 r ply.—Youth'. £
How Ono Got the Name.
The father oT a boy baby wished him
to be christened Thomas. The mother
favored the name of Hobert. When
they arrived at the church the matter
waa still undecided. The father in-
formed the curate that the ehild's
name was Thomas.
"Ob. nor' gasped the a*«b*r cfcstress
folly.
The curate, regarding the woman as
the ruling spirit, promptly baptized
the infant Ono.
T*e grave of Ono Titchener is to be
••a* in the churchyaad of St GUm'
Oiaafcerwell -London New*.
&ws Old Sons. Other torndtas Won't Cm.
1ST ^2 C!*!ldo m*"eeol how ton. stsndim
Jtt cattd by the wonderful, old reliable Dr
Porter s Antiseptic Henling Oil. It relieve
Pain and Heals at the same time. 25c. Vkv ti m
$100,000.00
TO LOAN
AT ONCE
Roland Hughes
Farm Loan Man
Call and see me, in
Collins Building
PHONE 165
Conger Bank Safe Co.
Safes, Vault Doors, Deposite
Boxes
OKLAHOMA. CITY, OKLA
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Hinds, C. W. B. The Hugo Husonian (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 24, 1914, newspaper, December 24, 1914; Hugo, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc139871/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.