The Hugo Husonian (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 31, 1914 Page: 2 of 5
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Husonian Publishing Co.
4. p. Mcdonald
w. w. B. HINDS
. . Gen'l Mgr.
Editor
ONE DOLLAR PLK VLAR
Published every Thursday, and en-
tered at the post office at Hugo, Okla-
homa. as second-class matter.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1914.
THE OWEN BILL
scilie of our senators who would close
them. Perhaps the professor is cor
rect. We have not the first-band
I knowledge of how exchanges operate
I on the whole. Several friends, how.
|t'*er. who sought to deal with the
professor's necessities, by some mis-
fortune or bad Judgment, had u crimp
put In their finances and never after-
ward liked to discuss the workings of
the sliebaug. Perhaps expert testi-
mony should be taken to see whether
pen Air Thajter In th*
H* irt q* the Alps
What In pr.iitiuiv ti,.. I41(ls, perfect
pastoral tbeatei ,n Kuro|ie is situated
in the heart of ti,.. Al|,s-at interlak
en. in Switserluiid thin unnpie **piuy
house" is „,„.u i„ „ll Hie winds that
blow, and its rui>r i> formed—in ' the
Burnt favorable nr.-,instance*-- by the
blue canopy oi rl„. «k> It is uot al
ways thus, however, nud It lias not in
frequently tmpp.nod that the hue .
the cauopy lias U.SH |,,vitlns B:„j
tliut players a! il spectators alike u
he had been invited to make a speech
Senator Owen would have the con-
stitution changed so that a war of
aggression could be possible only by
a majority rote of the people, and has
introduced a resolution to that effect.
ffce senator would not take from the
ifcier executive the right to call out
t*r troops in case this country were
MTaded, but simply desires that war
m any other nation be made at the
oamruand of the people who consti-
tute the government. It is not likely
ifcat the Owen bill will come in his
lifetime—it is ahead of the present-
ly enlightenment, but, scoff as some
way and do, an amendment to the
constitution will some day be made
i • that effect. The horror o! th«
present * r has set the great public
linking. The fact that a few hot-
headed monarchs could plunge the
tfiropean civilization into war is so ... lL)
repellant to modern ideals that it may j The probabilities are that th
the cause of all monarchies crumb- coventor will conduct business
the esteemed Yale professor is hep to experienced the mterlude ^
the game or was just talking because J dowu|K>ur which «tH Uot lu the ,,r
A .Madill young lady is ambitious
to become the wife of a man serving
a term in the state penitentiary. War-
drti Pick explained to the young lady
that if her sweet intended is good, he
can ;ash out of the prison in July
and she can arrange for a fourth of
July wedding. The young woman ex-
plained to the warden that her sister
bad once been the wife of the man,
but divorced h'tn on account of his
nine-year prison sentence. All of
which goes to show that love docs
not always get along on the main
highways, and that the ways of folks
pre somewhat hard to peg.
ling, not by the
ifce public revolts at
ereignty by birth.
Senator Owen is
thinker. Because of
e«garily at times errat
aire tactics, and he i:
>«t for what he beli
of amending the com
war matter will not 1
It will take decades fi
arrive at that stage
siere is here and the
Those who have been predicting
w hat \\ illiams will do when governor
ill soon have a chance to ascertain.
new
— as he
>rd, but because I has in the past. There will be little
the idea of sov-1 flubdub and ceremony will be none
j too prominent. For that the people
an advanced j will not complain. They are looking
t.iat, he is nec-j for a man who can man the ship of
ic in his aggres- j state and will not be overly par
i a stern adher- j lar as to whether he does the jo
itutiou on the
popular now.
the public to
f light But
strong senti-
gram.
The open air theater at lutwlaken U.
used for performances or Schiller a
great drama. "William Tell." for
which It 1* bv tutture admirably adapt
ed The stage is i rising meadow
framed on three side* by dense wood-
of bee.-h and pine, with "backclotb"
of grim, gray rock towering toward
the ky beyond Away to the right
stretches , hiiu-e semicircle of maun
tain peaks, iu* and jo.ooo feet high
and behind the spectator tower the
great peaks of the Bernese Oberland—
the Jiingfran. Monch and Elger, with
their burden of eternal snows.
Nature in accommodating mood has I
provided the entrances and exits of I
this unique theater-passages In the I
woods through which gallop with
thundering of hoofs on hard ground
the Pjnji cNj triers of the tyrannl
cai governor. The cuttle, goats nod
sheep which appear fn the first scene
-the return of the Hocks and herd-
from the AIpfne fii^-ires - approach
aowu the sleep pa th in the woods on '
the right nnd are heard long before j
they are visible, the tinkling nnd clang ;
Ing of their beUs mingling harmon! I
oosly with .he long drawn notes of
the huge wooden Alpine horn, seven
u-jfbet In length, and forming nn appro
in | priate overture - Wide World Maw.
rt1 z'ne. 6
For
teres
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.
EDWIN A. ELLINQHA'JSEN
Attorney-at Law
I Asleep
Before the
Burned to
Fire and
Death
Was
Wrlgn; Bldg.
Hugo, O^la.
O. A. STOVALL
Attorney at Law
-Pring Building.
A. M. Works
I
WORK8 & COPPING,
Attorneys at Law.
R« omB 5 and ti Darrough KuiHie
$100,000.00
TO LOAN
AT ONCE
Roland hughes
Farm Loan Man
Call and see me, in
Coliins Bui'dirg
OR. C. A. THOMPSON *
Dentist «
* Office in Vroeland Building.
♦ HUGO, . . . OKLAHOMA *
Mill Creek, Okla., Bee. 28.—Mrs.
1 om Quinton, whose home is fo«r
miles northeast of Mill Creek, was
, found Saturday morning in front of
(the ti replace in her home dead aad
I burned until the body was black. AH
I ller c,°thlng had burned off sa i*
fhons 264 a bit down the back. The breast uad
P. D. Coppiin "Women were burned Into a coal
' nn(i ,ler llair was hardly scorched.
j -lust how the accident occurred no
one will ever know. The unfortu-
! na,e la,ly was troubled with heart
failure and it is supposed this was
Jhe underlying cause of the incident
j SlFe went to bed as usual Friday
| night. It is thought that she became
' sick during the night and got up to
j take some medicine. She had the
| oil lamp in her liund and was sitting
before the fire, it is supposed that
while sitting ti„ re she died suddenly,
letting the lamp fall and break. Th,
flames spread to her clothing after
she had fallen, thus burning the froit
part of the body and clothing more
than other parts.
This is the view accepted by most
of the people, as a broken lamp was
** " ****
R. E. STEPHENSON
Attorney-at-Law
* Rooms 10-11 Darrough BuilfV.nr * i tL "'f people' ns a broke" lamI> wa
* HUGO OKI iitniti j found near the dead body, with th
• ♦ «, j>°^LAHOMA * j a" burned away.
* * * i Just what part of the night the trr
rtble thing occurred is not knowa
« • i ««
PUBLIC HEALTH
DEPARTMENT
Conducted by Dr. J. c. Mahr,
Stte Commissioner of Health.
sle
ment against aggression of the sword,
*£ainst making the sunset of young
men's lives come before manhood's
fullest prime could be obtained. The
right of every man to live is now
at the
was
estate
tim<
?red
; TWO POUTS OF VIEW.
he was in his prime : Who Had the Happier Lot, the Lady o',
a millionaire. III? | the Laborer?
me twenty cents on j A fashionable Woman, coining froir
the dollar. n this day and time one , ^icra lu the rosy nest of a Llniou
can never tell just who has the coin ' " i;rol") of I-aborers at
—I - 80mve "is "emise.
Steam
J. H. Goad Dead
( The husband was sleeping in ihe
I same room, but knew nothing of it
until a child awoke him, Saturday
morning. When he glanced from the
bed, he saw the crisp body of his
I wife lying there before the lire.
Mrs. Quinton leaves six small cbil-
j dren all under fourteen years of age.
will p;i
•I- H. Cload. a farmer who has re-
sided on the Tom Sanguin place near
Goodland for the past several years,
died early Monday morning. Mr. Goad
had been ill for several days. He
leaves n wife and four children to
, mala, were i.urrowi^J^n^h.0''I.",7 1 '"S deml8e- Mr' was o
rnor t'ruce has decided to re- j Steam was hissing "as If from'^e j- , ,"w"r,llng farmer and quite fav
M. W. Gross r. e. Rowell.
GROSS <t ROWELLS
Attorneys-at-Law
Office in Blakeney BuiiOng
AGED CITIZEN IS DEAD
J- B. Cook Died at Heme Here Early
Christmas Morning
k« ii i , 1 i r niih aecicied to re- ^cearn was bissin-' \t lariner ana quite
he .omanv decari ® tOj'^n to Ardmore. That will bring j mouths of a million Serpents liocks °ra')Iy kn°Wn in ,hat community
he so many decades as we measure | him closed to Hugo, the state's com- flpw ,n """" - ' —
■ me from the standpoint of history,
•ctil the great commonality will not
Zo cheerily to war in order that some
•Mie's pride may be avenged. The
senator will lose his resolution, but
whirligig of time will show that
eventually the commonality will reach
*at milepost on the scale of human
enlightenment.
ing metropolis, and sooner or later
he will be over here.
Those special interests who ex-
pect some big things done by legis-
lative enactment will have the con-
solation of knowing that few people
get everything they desire.
!" ~?ery ,lircctlon- Torchlights
flamed. There was the thnnder of Ln
I' Jh?N,Rbt Sll|ft was in full swing
And the Woman, glancing from the
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take {jrove's
•— .. ««,. tiancing from the ,TlleJ)Id Standard Grove's Tasteless
In« r " t','rtnin Workman, for an ^on'c !s equally valuable as a
instantthougl.tr General Tonic because it contains the
"IIow I wish 1 bad that brawny I.a Idto"icProPcrtie®0fQOTNINE
borer s strength and Jov of Lifel How ! 1, mi- J1'?"the Liver- Dr'ves
Once more the jingoes are deter-
mined that this country must go to
war with Mexico. They do not seem
!o under^fnnd what faction of the
Molica' -1 trounce, but are
hellbent on trouncing somebody down
oa the southern side of the Rio
rande. Tht average jingo never fig-1
■ res out what a war costs or what it
should be about. Just so the war
drum beats and the soldiers march to
the fore, be is a happy person and
gets ready the screamer headline and
awaits the first blush of red on tlie
breasts of his fellows. As a new?
Hem the jingo is all and somewhat |
hut as a citizen he is of no value and
Going back a day or so to the news
dispatches, let us pop in the query as
to w hether or not anyone was left in
Terre Haute. Indiana, after the fed-
eral grand jury had finished?
j fection, the wonder of his Manhood i
bis freedom from the Shackles that I
I hid me. lie is his own master, while
I I am a slave—the slave of a Man I i
| despise!" 1
At that moment the Laborer paused
•' "■ Co"l< died at the home In
Frisco place early Christmas morn
ing of pneumonia. |[P t,ad attained
the age of seventy-six years and was
favorably known to many residents
of Hugo. A son. "Jcck," ig a con-
ductor on the Frisco and two other
sons are railway brakemen here In-
Coneer RanL- l7™eut was nia'^ Saturday afternoon
s tJank Safe Co. at Mt- olivet cemetery, following fun-
eral services at the house.
STEWART A McDONALD
Attorneys at Law
2 3, 4 and 5 Stewart Building
Safes, Vault Doors, Deposite
Boxes
OKLAHOMA CITY,
Killed Two Yankee Hunters
riw Quinine That Dots Not Affect The Head
TIVH BROMO QUINI*NEi?bitt«
Ok'I A 0«inine and does not'V"!^Uer,hanord,nar>'
LI 1' v.ua3tu Muerc
his Engine rocked to glance Into th«
thon^bt*' S,'Pd b"V ,Mm' And he
Durant is ad7^~for 80me goodj anTwea't^and Kj,'^o'beTritom
| rudgery and Toil, to come nnd go n«
1 Ilnl t8 . ,r° "'rOW <,nr ,be C,1!1'ns Of
Debt and Worry and bnve the d.ivs
1 FieldnlRr v, Strt't' ,' a'H,n(1 0f me Ilk "a
r leld of I lowers;"
'"aao'' ' '""hint the Motor was
r, 1 '■v|'ii-hts t!are<l brighter
t an ever Ami each had forgotten the
jSe " 'S UaDS0U Towne' ,n
(By Associated Press.)
if . iwrer pnusei | Bp"aI°, New York, Dec. L'8.—The
a*.b"'1" mv wm
j citizens to come forward and be can
j didates for city offices. Durant Is t
I good town, but has some strange peo
all the
■s hard
he bills.
mone;
to ph
loan funds and
one has almost
along and pay
•«eht to be locked up twice each year' . Th'' Gutllrie Deader gets back
insure the public safety. ' "
Congressman Britton of Illinois
"ants one hundred thousand unem-
ployed men to enlist for the army
for a period of four months. He de-
clares the drill line is better than the
kread line, and that the men would, in
addition to being well clothed and fed,
he given an opportunity to learn how
to fight. This Illinois Britton does
ot spell bis name the English way,
>«t he has that kind of ideas.
at
I the tight bank situation bv declaring j mMen ?'l)0 ride
1.1... .v.. «. „„ c «
F. O.. Lutz, who died on the wat*r
^lle returning to his Guthrie heme,
want to Kansas with two dollars aud
liter became Oklahoma's greatest re-
tall merchant. Nobody ever heard
Lata growl. He wore the uuashine
smile and it brought him bpppiness
« d gold. Try it.
Kail way men claim their corpora
*ons have been the goat for all that
business ever did to the common-
ality. Now they ask, not for legisla-
tive relief, but for the proud privilege
of being let alone.
t.i^e In the Open.
Men who ride to hounds learn mnch
technique cf a sport.
J any money of the bankers he can bor-1 a^amber'V alT* ^
row all the trouble he can carrv „J J r er 'IuaI,ti09 ■re de
. 3" Carry" | V^oped- Fro<p the bridge of a battle
, ! p 1 have *eon a bontln? landsman
/ m 'S S to be said for, P,ct up torfjedo boata at night before
the fellow who is down and out—he lookout man saw them If ron
does not have to eiplain that the war | can brow" Tour skin nerv'Sa vintsh
has taxed him too much. i ®o«b«am are good for old bones and
* ' L°w?\ 0Ot bu-U" ®pnstant shade
mnltlpiy emotion ai^j Increase fad«
| W alter Smith and Charles Dorsch
! both Americans, who were hunting
| ducks out of season and had refused
i to surrender.
! — —
issued License to Wed
The following
have been issued
of Fort Worth,
Kitchem (26) Soi
(37) Powderly, Tc
Bennett Woodward; Franklin
Pierce Craig (27) to Miss Ethel Si,e
Fleming (21) both of Hugo.
Death of Bannister Infant
Round
Mamie
Vaughn
to .Mrs
Laurai
ter Excursion
-Nothing will help you more next
year than a great faith in yourself
and a strong application of energy to
whatever duty you have to perform.
Much as one would like to think
everything is all right, how can it be
done when Berlin and Firis are send-
ing out different reports on the war?
And among other new resolutions,
let us suggest raising more proven-
der for the stomach and less for
wearing apparel. ,
As evidence that this world is
•hristianized, a belligerent nat'oi
•rdered a million dollars worth of a n
■unition from a Pittsburg firm on
<*)ristmas day.
Still, as we go along, perhaps Gov-
"tuot Colquitt should first capture the
•an Antonio railway robbers Derore,
But fore and aft, it is not a cotton
loan the grower desires so much as a
stiffer price for an outright sale. I
zvr!?? v"nrt ,n the
t0 become for town dweller* nn
whjr^rp iui,M'y for ,he few - a
«nlte a Ekmvi
8a", the Dane*.
The ord "bull." as applied to a
Oanclng party, came to bo used to the
lnatance froa an ancient "ban
Pi"T 51veu oh,,rcl> by the deao and
«oir boys or Napi-j during tha Feast
of Fool, at Eniter m aabsciuent
dancing parUea In Naples tha dancers
threw a ball at one another to tba
*°u.n?^0' tIu'lr 0WD "'oein* Thev
whirled about In measured time and
too sport conalsted In loosening bonds
in time to catch the ball.
Power of th* Albatroa*.
The albatross, the largest webfooted
bird, measuring sometimes seventeen
feet from tip to tip of wing and weigh
tag up to twenty pounds, freqoentiy
_ accompanies ocean stenmer* from the
r, t, . * i Uelbourue. a distance of r
I resident W ilson started down the ^thoot hom* seen to rf t on'tfie
Governor Colquitt can leave his job
in Texas with the assurance that Sec-
retary Tumulty will not call him to
Washington.
The small child of Mr. and Mrs
dames Bannister died Sunday night
at the family home near Cody. The
infant had been ill only a few days.
Brother Died at Dallas *
IT-.- .
-V A. McMilitn of the St. Louis
I nion Trust company died at Dallas
Saturday of Bright's disease. De
ceased had often visited here, being
the brother of Mrs. (1. \Y. Wallace of
this city and Mrs. E. Brantley of
Antlers. Besides the two Bisters
mentioned Mrs. Oseie Goodwin and
Miss Scotta AlcMi 11 in of Dallaa were
sisters. He had no family of his own.
Mr. McMillin was flfty-six years of age
and one among Ihe prominent men of
the Texas metropolis.
VIA
fifty-ninth year with
peck of trouble.
a smile and a1 way'
There is also this to be said, men
manufacturing war munitions do not
complain of hard times.
I'aris, Texas, is trying to vote im-
provement bonds. Our southern sub-
liussian retreat is reported from
f' trograd as strategy. That's a new
name for it but we presume von Hin-
derburg does not care so long as he
is driving the Russ back.
We;
a wet
uary.
er prediction: There will b(
^ason in Fort Smith in Jan-
Father-, Ultimatum.
I think two can live as cheaply as
OBe. sir.
*►,"!?!! C"D I edge Into family on
ttat theory, young man. I'm willing to
keep o« supporting my daughter, but
you II have to pay boord."-LoulsvIlle
< ourier-.fotji-rini
How To Olve Quinine To Children.
• nt to i.k. l.VrJ 1"n Syrup, p ru-
^0%:^ ^v„vnu0r: i\hf, zhz
P«« "Ilk Z,'r° n"'' Ouinil« 'or >°y P..7
S2me FtBRILI vS f'1*'1"'' The
18 L.jwd in bottle. 25 cenU-
Eagle* Elected Officer*
Hugo Aerie No. 1079 met and elect-
ed officers for the ensuing year. The
following were unanimously elected:
Worthy president, R. L. Jones; vice-
president. R. A. Wright; secretary,
1'. W. Tyler; chaplain, F. M. Comp-
ton; conductor, W. E. Huss; treasurer,
■f W. Milam; inside guard, Marion
Watson; outside guard, Frank Marx;
trustees, Floyd Caylor. Boh Jones,
Tom Bryan.
Sale
Curious Oversight.
"What <i., vo think. Magda-shnll I
deliver my el.Ire-, ot) 'The Ideal Wife
JURt an | v written it?"
o . ' not Yon must rewrite It
^Has Villa evacuated or decapitated JSf!T°1' ^ 8t a,L"-M^
No. Six-Sixty-Six
Ft 710' *.lX d°,e' Wl11 break Bny ca.c Bnci
•f taken then a. a tonic Ihe Fever will not
return. It acta on (he liver betfer th n
Calomel end dOct not gripe or eickcn. 25c
Tickets on
; Daily
November 1st 1914 to
March 31st, 1915 final
limit] May 1st 1915
PhoneU71ther at ticket office or
B. D. FALLON
Agent
1
ir>
f-
l)
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Hinds, C. W. B. The Hugo Husonian (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 31, 1914, newspaper, December 31, 1914; Hugo, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc139872/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.