The Hugo Husonian (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 26, 1914 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
FUNSTOM'S FORCES
LEFT VERA CRUZ
AMERICAN ARMY OF OCCUPATION
LEFT HISTORIC MEXICAN CITY
EARLY IN MORNING
Leavinfl of Americans from 8tricken
Mexican Republic Was Accomplish-
ed With Good Feeling
(By Associated Press)
Vera Cruz, Mexico, Nov. i:3.—The
American forces of occupation under
he command of Brigadier General
Funston, after a seven luontlis stay
ia this city, today began embarking
in transports to return to the United
States. The outposts began falling
back at 9 o'clock this morning and
two hours later the first American
troops began boarding the transports
•f the famous military harbor.
The evacuation was without excite-
ment and the populace gave evidence
of their good feeling towards the
little army that has held the city
both when peace and wa- < eemed
imminent. All details of the evacua-
tion were settled without difficulty
or bickering.
The Mexican troops under command
of General Aguilar took possession of
the city as fast as the Americans
embarked. These Mexicans had mob-
ilized just outside of the American
outposts last night. The city was
exceptionally quiet, all saloons being
closed, but many people were nervous
and business houses remained closed.
The Americans took with them 300
Mexicans who feared to remain. It
was rumored that former Carranza
troops who recently deserted to Villa
are also near Vera Cruz. Nun refu-
gees were taken aboard the American
transports. The Americans also car-
ried vast sums of gold and customs
receipts to be held for return to Mex-
ico. The departing soldiers and ma-
rines numbered nearly seven thou-
sand men.
GREATEST PROBLEM
WE ARE LONG ON PRODUCTION,
SHORT ON DISTRIBUTION.
By Peter Radford
Lecturer National Farmers' Union.
The economic distribution of farm
products is today the world s greatest
problem and the war, while it has
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 men tho
solution of their marketing problem.
This result will, in a measure, c om
THE FARMERS THE CUSTOOIAN8
OF THE NATION'S MORALITY.
Co-operation of Church, 8chool and
Press Essential to Community
Building.
BELIEVE PIECEWORK IS BEST1
employers of Labor Bring Strong Ar '
guments to Bear in Favor of
That System.
The point is often made that the j
trade union with iu day-rite mini
tnum a<*>um&s that ail of its crafta
men are equally efficient and thai
they should be paid accordingly. En*
pioyers are not likely to arlmlt this al
legation, but sometimes they act as II
they also believed in a dead level
among workmen.
1 The president of a large electrical
railway system Is consistently opposed
1 to piecework or premium systems, not
| because of any fear of labor troubles
or the special conditions of electric
GERMAM WAR TOLLS
II
By Peter Radford
Lecturer National Farmer*- Union.
The church, the press and the school' f*llway maintenance, but simply on
form a triple alliance of progress that assumption that no shopman can
guides the destiny of every commun- i UBO ^r ^ %\ *
ity. state and nation W ithout them IT.u? „ 1 P BUPErlntendent
, civilization would wither and riio nn railway has b«en able tc
pensate us for our war losses, for ill- through them life may attain iu great I h'8 argument for a piece-
business interests and government est blessing, power and knotled^1 . "y em by making a careful tud
have been in the main assisting al- J The farmers of this nation . g, ! °' Practices in other shops, and be
most exclusively on the production indebted to this social triuinvb-at*** i .hM <3eterm,ned that « large Increase
— —
canines for T"" high tated that th® abolition of the day I
service and I ihnii r a"d e'DciP"t would Produce a "et saving of j
, and I shall offer to the press* about tw# ntv n« r rant <~ * I
a series of articles on co-operation
between these Important Influences
and the farmers in the hope of in-
creasing the efficiency of all by mu-
tual understanding and organized ef-
fort. We will take up, first, the rural
church.
Carranza Sought a Coup
Washington, D. C., Nov. 23.—Con-
fidential state department reports say
♦hat Carranza had plans for an elev-
enth hour abandonment of Mexico
City to Zapata, the start of the move-
ment commencing last week. It was
frustrated by General Blanco's re-
fusal to leave the city unprotected
One official Mexican report claims it
was reported that Zapata was to sack
the city while Carranza tore up the
railway tracks north of the city to
prevent Villa arriving ahead of Za-
pata. The exact plans of Carranza
for abandonment to Zapata are not
known, but that Blanco flatly refused
to obey is a fact.
HIS INTEREST
(By Associated Press.\
Madrid, Nov. 23.—King Alfonso
takes a deep interest in the war. He
■ever goes to bed until he lias seen
the French official statement.
With the principal members/of his
general staff the king works out the
positions of the armies on a large
scale French ordnance survey map.
which hangs in a prominent position
on his office wall. He discusses ev-
ery movement eagerly and enthusi-
astically with his generals, explain-
ing to them what lie would have dine
had he been In the place of the op-
posing commanders. Those who have
been present at these midnight gath-
erings declare that tho young man's
criticisms are remarkably shrewd and
show a firm grasp of tho underlying
principles of modern warfare.
Opinion generally regarding the war
is divided, clericals, conservatives
and the military element sympathiz-
ing with Germany, although there are
some notable exceptions, such as Se-
■or Maura, the leader of the conserv-
ative party, who has declared his in-
terest and sympathies for France.
The radicals go so far as to advocate
the intervention of Spain at the side
•I France, while the republicans are
in favor of a benevolent neutrality.
side or agriculture. While the depart-
ment of agriculture has been dumping
ton:? of literature on t'^ farmer t< liin^
him how to produce, ihe farmer lias
be> n dumping tons of products in the
nation's garbape 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 lack of r.roger distribution.
Slight variations In production have
forced a change in diet and one local-
ity has felt the pinch of want, while
another surfeited, but the world as a
whole has ever been a land of plenty.
We row have Ices than one-tenth of
the tillable land of the earth's surface
under cultivation, and we not only
have 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 forest, gather it from wild
vines and draw It from streams. No
one should become alarmed; the
world will never starve.
Thf consumer has always feared
that the producer would not supply
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 of the demands of the consumer.
Back 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 welcome our city cousins b!Tck 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
we can use Tile city man lias 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 etfeeeds that of our in-
crease in population.
The World as a Farm.
Taking the .vorlQ as one bis farm,
we find two billion acres of land in
cultivation. Of this amount there is
approximately 750,000,000 acres on the
western and 1,200.000.000 acres on the
tern 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 rin'-.iial crop approxi-
mates fifteen i li on bushels of ce-
reals, thirteen billion pounds of fibre
'nd siSty-fiv-. million tons of meat.
The average annual world crop for
'he past five years, compared with the
previous f.ve years, is as follows:
Pa?t H lf Previous Half
Crops — Decado. Decade.
Corn (Ru.) 3.934,i74 000 3.403.6.ri5,0f.O
WheatfHu.) 3,">22,769.000
Ofts (Bu.) 4,120.017,000
Cotton (Hal es) 19,SG3,800
The world shows an
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
(By Associated Press.)
I'aris, Nov. 23.—It la recalled that
some cities and towns of seven de-1
partments of France that were occu-
My First
Detective Lesson
By ELLIOT MANSFIELD
#
, J ^ "Want to learn the business, do
Pied by the Germans in 1870-71 are four Closser said. "Well, the quickest
"tm under the burdenof debt incurred way to learn anything Is to do It
to satisfy the requisitions of the Ger- There's a gang of counterfeiters to bs
m"!8- I ron down, and I'll put you on the Job.'
The same departments and many! "Can't you give me something easier
of the same towns occupied by the ^ to begin on?" I asked.
Germans during the present war have j "I give you this because It Is easy "
incurred further burdens. Since the be replied "A counterfeiter is handl-
>var is waged for the protection of all | capped with a workshop He must
the territory, a project is under con- have his contrivances to make his bills,
sideration to relieve them in part by and after be lias made them he
distributing the charges over the
whole territory.
The Farmers Are Great Church Build
bo the wages of Individuals but the
total coet of maintenance per car mile
—Electric Railway Journal.
SACRED SPORTMITENGLAND
lated that the abolition of the day ]
rate would produce a net saving of
the press about twenty per cent Id labor coet
He is also convinced that the piece-
work system would actually result In
better workmanship because the pres-
ent day rates are too low to appeal to
good shopmen.
This has been the result on most
roads where the piecework system has
been Introduced. But it seems to take
ers. | a long time to overcome the prejudice
The American farmer is the greatest I a«a'nst a workman earning more than
church builder the world has ever I 1116 ordinary wages of his craft even
known. He is the custodian of th" < when production Is corresponding,
nation's morality; upon his shoulders ! 17 neater. After all, the prime con-
rests the "ark of the covenant" and cern of an economical management
he is more responsive to religious in-j f* r®l®ted 10 sh°P accounts should not
fluences than any other class of cit-
izenship.
The farmers of this nation have
built 120,000 churches at a cost of
$<50,000,000, and the annual contribu-
tion of the nation toward all church
institutions approximates $200,000,000 i Farmer Who Broke Up Hunting Meet
per annum. The farmers of the Uni- j Punished by the Master of
tea States build 22 churches per day ' the Hounds.
There are 20,000,000 rural church com- I
municants on the farm, and 54 per r]se nnusual incident of a master of
cent of the total membership of all j hounds thrashing a horseman in the
churches reside in the country. i bunting field was witnessed near Sails-
The farm is the power-house of all ! ^ury, England, recently.
progress and the birthplace of all tiiat ' There was a meet of the Tedworth
is noble. The Garden of Eden was j nounds at Abbotts Ann, and the fine
in the country and the man who v.ould weather attracted about fifty riders. A
get close to God must first get close 'ox wa8 drawn In Stonehanger wood,
to nature. j but of scent there was none, and the
The Functions of a Rural Church. fox made gootl lli3 escape. A little lar
If the rural churches today are go- -6r' without there being any sign of s
L BE TREATED
tng to render a service which this age
demands, there must be co-operation
between the religious, social and eco-
nomic life of the community.
The church to attain its fullest meas- ■ "11
e of success must enrich the lives ! '
fox, some half dozen of the houndk
picked up a line in the open whic*
Ihe master at once recognized as &
drag, there being a strong smell of
ure
pack went off at lightning speed
of the peoi)le in the community "it T trail> and the master al"
serves; it must build character; devel- ' L I v contlDue 1,10 ln " •
op thought and increase the efficiency 1 °' °Terf?au,11°g.">e layer °f
of human life. It must serve the so- 11 Ojately the master saw a
cial, business and intellectual as well 1 ho"eman- and Piling his horse to •
as the spiritual and moral side of life j £ h°P BOO° °Jertook h,If- He Proved
If religion does not make a man more ^ tmm- The
capable, more useful and more Zt. ' meet the
what good is It? We want a practical
religion, one we can live by and farm
by, as well as die by.
Fewer and Better Churches.
Blessed is thut rural community
which has but one place of worship.
While competition is the life of trade,
It is death to the ml church and
moral starvation to r.j community.
Petty sectarianism is a sccur^e that
blights the life, an^ the church preju-
master, Oswald Rile", administered
sound thrashing to the farmer with his
hunting crop. His action, says a local
correspondent, was witnessed by the
field of huntsmen and was warmly ap-
proved by them.
must
get good money for them. Therefore
he is In constant danger; he's the easi-
est rogue of nil to get "
The Joh be gave me was very easy
because it was already half done. A
man ln B., who lived alone in a
bouse lie had rented, that was big
enough for a large family, was sua-
pectcd, and I was sent to locate op
posite him and get information as to
what he was doing. I hired a room,
(By Associated Press.) 1 from the windows of which I could
Stockholm, Nov. 2:). — Russian chli- look right down on to his house, and
dren will receive their Christmas b®gan my watch. Closser had told
gifts from America if American chil- «ne that the surest way of getting blm
drmi have done their duty. Nelson' was through his mail. The postman
Morris, the American minister In often came when the suspect was out
Stockholm, has taken up with the «nd would drop his letter ln an out-
Russian authorities the question of aide box for that purpose. Seeing
admitting the gifts and of facilitat- blm do so one evening after dark, I
tng their shipment and distribution. I went across the street took the box tr
His efforts have met with ready re-1 my room, opened it. took out the let
sponse on the part of the Russians ters steamed the gum by which the
and he gives assurance of arrange-1 envelopes were fastened, read the
ments for the prompt handling of the mail, put the letters back ln the e®
▼elope and replaced the box.
The letters were nearly all from
business houses to which the man had
applied for a position, nothing what-
ever Incriminating ln any of them. 1
_. . | w <ote Closser that there must be some
Pioneer Resident of City Died Sun-, adstake, mentioning my capturing ot
day of Paralysis the suspect's mall. My instructor re
j piled that the letters had been pur
Mrs. E. J. Hurd died Sunday even- P086'^ '°ft in a box to throw a shadow
ing of parlysis. Mrs. Hurd was sixty-! er off ttle track 1 uiust ,(>ok e,s®
eight years of age and had been wid-' WH.!re for tho real ,u""
owed for some time She was a ! next (,:Jy a tcle«ruPh bo7 ca'le<5
sMer of t a hwl- v, j u at the fe!low'a house with a dispatch
been a resL^ ^ T and co,lldn't ^ ' • While be w„>
been a resident of this city for many j ringing I went ov.-r and aske-J hlit
years. Interment was made this aft-, whom he wanted He handed me t
ernoon at Mount Olivet, the services Sispatch. wbl b 1 opened and read
part of the Christmas ships' cargo
destined for that country.
DEATH OF MRS. HURD
being held at 2:30 o'clock.
DeE?th of Earl Sowers
Earl Sowers, sixteen years of age, j
died at the family home fi?e miles
'Can't you come home for the weel
snd?" was all !!; re was in it, and i
was signed "Mother." Giving the bcr
* dime. I sent him away. The enve^
►pe had been loosely gummed, and ?
had no trouble in putting It together &
look as if it had not been opened. <
fthoved It tinder the door and went t--
my room. I hadn't been there long be
3,237,526,000
3,608.315.000
17,541,200
average
carries a three-hundred-dollar watch,
took a cheap nickel-case timepiece
dice saps the vitality, of many com- i (rom bl« desk and put it into his
munitie? An over-churched commun- 1 Pocket
ity is a crime against religion, a seri- "That," he said, "is to time myself
ous handicap to society and a useless i while eating. When I am in a big
tax upou agriculture. i &urry, aa I am today, I eat with my
While denominations are essential ; watc'1 lying on the table In front of
and church pride commendable, the < me' la a buBy P'ace—that lunch
high teaching of universal Christianity j counter where 1 feast at noontime,
must prevail if the rural church is to i There are plenty of other men there
fulfill its mission to agriculture. I alBO ,n a hurry, and who eat with their
We frequently have three or four ! watcl3e8 laid out in plain sight, in
chiirchcs in a community which is not the 8huffle there is danger of a mix-
abb !• adequately support one Small i up That happened to me once. A
congregations attend services once a ! ®ne wa'ch was Picked up by a neigh-
month and .1! fail to perform the re- . w!'en 1 haPPened not to be look-
is functions of the community.
fhe Best Hot Weather Tonic
.ROVE S TAST2I.ESachill TONIC enriches t>
~lood, builas up the whole system and will woi
Watch to Eat By. .cHnilr strecKth n and fortify you to withsi ^
Before going to luncheon, a Wash- | . 'feet of the botSuP3er.
Ington business man Vho habitually
my Duty t Hly Neighbor.
Tbsre li an idea abroad among nor
al pestle that they should make tbsl
neighbors good. One person 1 htrs
to make good—myself; but my duty
to rey neighbor ii much more nearl:
expreuned by saying tha 1 have U
make him harpy, if I Hobart
louis St
Thrt#.
Professor at Agricultural School—
"What kind* of farming are thereT"
New Student—"Extensive, Intensive
and expeweive."—iudlan^pniu Star
Osily ThetigM,
Silence is dea as elarnity, -r-T^
to in flow as ttw«.—Cariyla
of only three per cent.
The gain ln production far exceeds j be minimized by co-operation. The
that of our increase In population, and j social and economic life of a rural
it is safe to estimate that the farmer j community are respective units and
] ing. To prevent a repetition of that
The division of religious forces and j ^x,1>e^lcnce' ' keeP this two-dollar af-
thp breaking into fragments of moral ! I. I °r Iunch purposes, so that if any-
efforts is ofltim% tittle less than a 1 y 8 take 1 Bhan,t lose much."
calamity and defeats the very purpose i ~ ——_
they seek to promote. ' . Sewer* of Paris.
The evils of too many churches can lh6 °,ty 01 Par'8 has
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 people of this nation shtould
address themselves to the subject of
Improved facilities for distribution.
Overproduction 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.
TUs* Wa, Not In His Una,
Tlie men who learns mmj
(Mges does not always enlarga hli
talnd. A porter In a Sales hotsl who
•poks many languages with equal fa
elllty and inaccuracy, was cno* asksd
what was hi, native toogua Ha re
piled that be did not know, bat Mat
te spoke all languages. "Bat la what
laagaag* d yon think?" asked (fee
parslsteat questioner. 1 ten Uak*
as the pnmn rs fr.—qn
cannot be successfully divided by de-
nominational lines, and the churches
can only occupy this important field
by co-operation and co-ordination
The efficient country church will
definitely serve its community by lead-
vast net-
work of drainage having a total length
of more than 1,000 miles. The con-
struction of this vast system is said
to have cost In the neighborhood of
$30,000,000. The proper keeping up
and cleansing of tfte sewers of Pari*
costs the city about $500,000 annually,
and for the work the services of 1,000
men are necessary. Telephone and
telegraph wires, as well as water
ing in all worthy efforts at community I oTnes and n^n^^t,*' k"
taliam,. 1„ u.. people In I £P„V.h.
SKSK sr 2 •"
ES-rf--
these results can only be successfully conveyed through the sewers by elea
accompllshed by the united . ftort of j trie trains or by boats towed by eles-
the press, the school, the church and trie traction
organised farmers. | [
Lower Animals That Weep.
Among the creatures that weep most
•astly are the ruminants. All hasten
know that the stag we«t>e. aad we are
also a«*)irad that (be bear sheds lean
when it seee its last hour approaching
Tha giraffe is not less swaattlva, and
regards with taarftl eyes tbs hunter
who baa eouM K. Dogs wwsp quits
•astly. Ttae aaaae m trss of certain
onk«|re. As •*- the elsfhaat, tbsre
is abaadaat seMsssa t *s mm with
WW* H w*MS R ^
whaa it a*
^ , , mi/ iwui. i uuuu i wen raere K>ne oe
northeast of the city late Saturday fore the suspect returned, opened to-
night, death being due to appendi- i dispatch, read It and went into ths.
citis. The young lad had come with | house.
his parents from Mississippi only a When I reported this to Closser fa-
week prior to death. Interment was wr°te me that the fel'ow had doubt
made Sunday at Spring Chapel cem- ,eBS sent the disPat°h to himself •.
etery. I mislead a sbadower. I d better look
| out for some means of communlcatlo:
j not bo public. Asking me if there wei>-
any deliveries of supplies made at tb
boose, I told him that a baker's bo-
carried a loaf of bread there ever",
morning. Closser wrote me to tie Ir
wait for a loaf and take it In. I dldn"'
see any sense in doimg so. but obeyed
The next morning I was up early, an
when the boy came along and left tb.
Trinidad's Mangrove Trees.
The mangrove tree, which I? foatii bread I wen clrcuitonsiy across ti
ifc Trinidad, has many peculiarities
For or. a thing, Its seeds germinate cn
the branches, and vh^n the shoots era
considerably grown tl>^y fall o2 ar.d
take r^ot in the mu;i. As the vouni
tree grows It sends out fresh "rooti
from its trunk and lower branches,
ontil at >.st the treo e?- ns to be sujv
po-ted by a network cf roots, or com-
plicated series of arches in the mirlst
of which crabs, aquatic birds and u,
•ects take up their abodo,
What Progrcacf .
Fow 40 you measure your statnrs
as compared with a year ago? Dy
street took tie loaf and broke It in*..
small pieces. Finding nothiug in it. !
reported the fact to my chief, who r.-
plied that if I hnd b*>en s<>en by till-
man opposite 1 had blocked my owr
game. One thins I noticed-no movt
bread was le t nt the house
Closser wr>te me that It might b.
■ good idea to scrape an aequaintan.-
with the suspect I met him (pi;
posely) Just before he went into b.i
house and asked him to tell me ti: *
way to the Union depot. He seeme '
as willing to talk as I was, and I boom
learned that his uncle owned t'
bouse he was in ond permitted him t
the size of your bank iccounCby the ' ^ Wl"le he ,ooked for a P°*
applause you aavo won. bv tho wider
ki/owledge you h ve gained, by tha
Ideals you havv reiched. by v.h .: you
have achieved for humanity? Com
pared with a year ago. what are yoi
today as the result of moral reaction
that tin wild's efforts have created
within you?-.School EducaUoa.
In this Instance for antecedent a cho.n
of subjects, one In the second and one
In the third persou. It seems that we
are free to use our own ear and And
out whether It Is Jarred or not Aa
matter of fact. It Is not a matter of eat
so much as of visual Imagination that
caused us ta ohoose the form that
raises the image of the person spoken
to instead of tbs ladlstlnct Image ©.'
a mac la general, and wt jd It comes
to mr and visual Imagination ths
Bible, Coriyla, Maeaulay aad l«ng
fellow eaa yrobaMy rtfir aleag -
Harper's Week*.
Zola's Dreaded Mumner.
Vo Emile Zola 17 was alway*
number of evil omen, so much sc
that for year- be could scarcely h' ir.
dueed to leave his hc.ui. ) r-vei
undertook any important « on
that day of tli-j mouth '<> r - P ious-
ly did it dog his footsteps ::u,; the
narrowest escape he ever had from c
tiaglo death was djp ;o a cab whioi
koto Ihe nur.ibsr bo
Protection True Insurance.
Protection fioiu u.e Ore e the only
to*a lnsuranoe. To use fireproof ma
at a slightly greater cost la
Paling yoar Ore Insurance premium
•M* aad Cor all.
«f a WsMa
OWaoa, •Mllfsl Farmo^
*7 i *«Jve farming ths ChlneM
°ther nationality
f *o id Us la. _
L"*1??*? T*- bltt ^ •1 *w abinty sof' Mt>
*** •«aii space of sant
***** rimu. tkoy Ijgojva
tlon. This seemed to explain everr
thing, and I wrote to Closser that 1>
had sent me on a fool's errand. I was
tired of It and was going home. !!►
replied that I'd better remain one d't
longer, which I did.
The next day about noon I saw set
era! men loitering around the suspect'*
bouse and presently saw the suspec-
ted out with a pair of bracelets ot
his wrists. I was dumfounded. No
knowing any better way to find w
the facts, I went home and straight i
Closser.
"Who arrested that young man?"
"He was arrested by my srder."
"But I've found out nothing agnin^-
him."
"No. you haven't, but others haw
Ton wanted to learn something, and
sent you where you could do so. I bac
the fellow nearly cornered and sc.
ron to watch him in order to thro^
him off the track of the real detectives
I gm^e you one point, but you bang!e.i
Right.
A good many people sympath
With the ander dog, but they do.
Want the upper dog to know it.
w Pressure of Poverty
^** Newrtahe—"1 believe our t-
toor neighbors on the right are
Poorae ehuroh mice, Hiram" >
r'M" i lobe—"What makes you th >
Newrtcho—"Why, t- .
■Herd one of them meehar.
WanoPHyere; the daughter ta tak.-a
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.
Hinds, C. W. B. The Hugo Husonian (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 32, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 26, 1914, newspaper, November 26, 1914; Hugo, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc141363/m1/3/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.