The Paden Herald (Paden, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, March 29, 1912 Page: 2 of 4
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The Paden Herald.
By P.dcn Publishing Co.
PADEN, - - OKLAHOMA
Entered at the postofficc at Paden,
Oklahoma, as second-class mail matter.
Published every Friday at Paden,
©klunoma, in the interest of Paden and
Okfuskee county.
Subscription. $1 per Year iu Advance
Oklahoma N ew« Notes
A Rock Island brakeraan named Eby
was run over by a train at Hailey*
Till© and killed.
Modern Journalism.
Arthur Brisbane, the editor, praised
at a dinner in New York the educa-
tive value of moving pictures.
"But, of course," he said afte* . trds,
"the moving picture will neve* *iual
the newspaper as an educative force.
"The newspaper not only reports
news— in dull seasons it makes news
as well. A famous editor put this
news-making feature very neatly be-
for a cub reporter when he said:
" 'If a dog bites a man it isn't news.
But, if a man bites a dog, it is. When-
ever you can't find a man biting a dog,
go and bite one yourself.'"
THE HELFLIN BILL
UNFAIR TO FARMERS
WOULD UNSETTLE AND REVOLU-
TIONIZE COTTON MARKET
COTTON
MUST HAVE HEDGE
FACILITIES
Also With Gloves.
Assistant Editor—Here's a farmer
writes us asking how to treat Sick
bees.
Editor—Tell him he'd better treat
them with respect.
The people of Marsden, in Love
county, will organize a truck growers'
association. The town is off the rail-
road, but is located in a fine agricul-
tural section of the state.
His Business.
"That man indulges in shocking
language."
"Influence of his trade. He's a tele-
graph lineman."
Which Enables the Farmer to Sell
His Product at a Better Price
Several Months In
Advance.
James Walker, Shawnee Indian, died
near Tulsa recently of pneumonia at
the age of 109. He was born at Sa-
bine, Texas, and fought in both the
Mexican and Civil wars. He was chief
medicine man for the Shawnees. He
suffered a thigh amputation this fall.
By a vote of 459 to 73 the proposi-
tion to issue $55,000 In bonds for
waterworks carried at Alva. The
water will be piped from cold springs
located five miles northwest of the
city, where six wells were recently
bored and tested, showing a flow of
150,000 gallons per day.
Yesterday we cheerfully chipjved in
two metallic men to help inter a friend
of ours who could "take a drink or let
It alone!"
Dr. Piercc's Pleasant Pellets regulatb
and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
Sugar-coated, tiny granules. Easy to take
a* candy.
Many a man with one foot in the
grave does enough kicking with the
other to make up for it.
PTWEH CURED IN 6 TO
TQ^TU7an«l8t will rotund munoj if I A/O OINT-
MENT fulls to cun> uny case of I'Chtng, Blind,
Bleeding or ProtruuI iik Piles iu6u>14duys. 6llc.
There's room at the top because
somebody is always coming down.
At an enthusiastic meeting held re-
cently the Bokoshe Commercial club
was organized, with a membership of
fifty regulation Oklahoma "boosters."
The officers are: N. Nelson, chairman;
A. F. Bray, secretary; Frank L. Dob-
bins, treasurer. The club offers a
prize of $5 for a town slogan.
"The city beautiful" is the motto of
the Cosmopolitan club of Chickasha
and, according to plans that city will
foe one of the civic attractive towns
In the state. The vinca has been
adopted as the city plant and all prop-
erty owners have been advised to
plant it in their yards.
An appeal from the district court
of Stephens county was taken to the
supreme court in the case of Minnie
H. Howell against William T. Howell.
Mrs. Howell Vas granted an absolute
divorce by the lower court last No-
vember, but was denied alimony.
Cerebro-spinal meningitis has made
Its appearance in two more counties,
reports of cases in Logan and Cana-
dian counties being received at the of-
fice of the state board of health. There
•was one case in each of the counties,
and one death in Canadian. Two new
oases were reported from Carter
county.
Doctors know
that Oxidine is a
most dependable sys-
tem-cleansing tonic.
Most useful in stirring
up lazy livers, sluggish
bowels and kidneys,
weak stomachs. Its ef-
fects are quick, safe,
sure and permanent.
OXIDINE
—a bottle proves.
The specific for Malaria, Chills
and Fever and all diseases
due to disorders of liver,
stomach, bowels
and kidneys.
50 c. At Your Druggist*
TBI Bznnsxa DBTTG OO.,
Waco, Texas.
Grady county cattle won the first
premium in three-year-old steers, the
first in the two-year-old and the third
in the yearling entries at the Fort
Worth livestock show last week. The
cattle entered were owned by Henry j
B. Johnson and are white-faced Here-
fords and Polled Angus. The John- I
son cattle win blue ribbons every
year.
An organization of negroes, non-
jectarian and non-political, the object j
of which is the uplift of the race, has
been formed in Oklahoma City. It is
said to be the object of the organiza-
tion "to promote economy, self-help i
and race-uplift from the cradle to the
grave, to raise the standard of citi- ;
zenship and to instill respect for the
law and patriotism." It is also the |
plan of the organization to promote
the material, civic, educational wel-
fare of negroes and mankind in gen-
eral, and to lan for mutual protection
of life, home and property of all
worthy and efficient members of the
race.
Shine
Stays
Don't imagine for
moment that all brands o[
stove polish are alike.
If your 6toves become rusty and
dull soon after they are polished it
shows that you arc not using
STOV,
Okmulgee county has another thou-
gand barrel well. It was brought in
recently in the Morris field, and is lo-
cated at near the center of the south-
west quarter of section 16-13-14. This
is the third good well on the lease
and the fourth in the immediate vicir
ity.
O. M. Ferrln, an undertaker and
furniture dealer of Watonga, Blaine
county, filed a voluntary petition in j
bankruptcy in the federal court. He j
pays his debts are $4,875 and his as-
eets $8,775.
As a result of the special election
called by Governor Cruce, Eufaula is
now a city of the first class by an
almost unanimous vote. These city
officials, all democrats, were elected:
Frank Eckelkamp, mayor; Wiley C.
Grifflng, police judge; C. Hopper, city
attorney; H, D. Lambert, chief of po-
lice; Jack Ramsey, ciiy clerk; E. G.
Bailey, treasurer; E. A. Lewis, city
assessor; T. S. Sweeney, street com-
missioner; T. J. Gleason, treasurer of
the school board.
Liquid and Paste—One Quality
Black Silk makes a brilliant,
silky polish that does not rub off
or dust off, and the shine lasts four
times as long as ordinary stove
polish.
It is used on sample stoves by
hardware dealers. Sold by them
to those who want good goods.
All we ask is a trial. Use it on
your cook stove, your parlor stove
or your gas range. If you don't
find it the hist stove polish you ever
used, your dealer is authorized to
refund your money. Insist on
lllack Silk S?4 ve Polish. Don't
accept substitutes. All dealers
can get Black Silk from their job-
bers.
"A Shine In
Every Drop"
Keep your grate*, registeri, fenderitnd itore
pipe* bright ami free from runinK by u lng
BLACK SILK AIR-DRYING F.NAMEL. Bru.h
free with each can of enamel only
U.e BUCK SILK METAL POLISH for
illrerware. nickel, tinware or brats. It worka
quickly, easily. and leaves a brilliant turface.
It hat no equal for u«e on automobiles.
B)ack Silk Stove Polish Works
STERLING, ILLINOIS
Get a Can TODAY
Oklahoma City, March 14.—Hon. N
T. Blackwell, editor of tho Cotton anil
Cotton Oil News of Dalian, spoke here
today to the business men and farin-
j era on cotton, fertilization, the need
of cotton grading, schools, etc.
i Mr. Blackwell said in part:
"I address you not as an editor and
■writer, but as a farmer, as I am a
j farmer and landowner. I want to ad-
dress you briefly on issues of the most
vital importance to every man, woman
and child in the South dependent di-
rectly or indirectly on the cotton
plant. . .
"The subject of fertilization is just
beginning to seriously engage the at-
tention of our people. In Texas,
Oklahoma, and other sections of
the South, with rich virgin soil,
we are prone to overestimate the
] lasting qualities of same. We per-
! mit fortunes of fertilizer to go
! to waste for the lack of energy and
a proper knowledge of the chemical
needs of our soils to apply same. Ev-
ery ton of cotton stalks burned robs
i the soil of $9 in value in potash which
said stalks annually take from the
! soil. We cannot go on and on rob-
I bing the soil and never giving back
I the chemical properties taken from
it to produce cotton without being (lis*
! appointed finally in the yield.
i "I want to urge my hearers to take
j as good care of cotton after it leaves
I the gin as they do a 15c bale of hay.
1 Cotton left in the weather will con-
tract country damage and the short-
sighted farmer who leaves his cotton
exposed, invariably loses in weight, as
cotton once wet will lose when dried
out. Take care of your cotton, wrap
It up fully and neatly and avoid a row
with the buyer over country damage
and help make our American packages
reach their destination without look-
ing like the miserable shabby or-
phans they are when they reach the
other side.
"Another important question I wish
to discuss with you and urge you to
begin now is to ask your State Leg-
islatures to make provisions for the
establishment of cotton grading
schools in the high school of each
county seat of the entire South. It
is inconceivable that only two per
cent of our cotton planters are able
to grade their cotton, and thereby ar-
rive at an intelligent appraisal of Its
| value—the most valuable product of
our soli. These schools can be estab-
j lished with slight cost and conducted
| In the summer months when the
j young men of the farms have leisure
j time.
| "The only way to get anything near
what the present or the next crop of
cotton is worth is to hold a million
bales or two of this crop over into
! next year's crop and reduce the acre-
age 25 per cent. A 14,000,000 bale
crop in 1912 will bring 6 cents per
pound. A 12,000,000 bale crop will
bring 12 cents per pound. The only
thing that can prevent a good ad-
vance of say $5 to $10 per bale in
cotton, if held for a few months, is
for the bill of Heflin, of Alabama,
seeking to abolish future dealing in
cotton to pass or even to be reported
favorably by the committee on agri-
culture. Either would break the
price of cotton $5 per bale at the
present time.
"On the question of cotton ex-
changes, the future trading feature or
the application of the hedge preroga-
tive to the spot deal, our people are
very poorly informed or rather mis-
Informed. In fact when very few of
our ablest editors or statesmen have
given the matter any thought how can
we exect our farmers to know any
better when they depend upon the
first named men to enlighten them.
"The producer of cotton and a
large per cent of the public generally
have a hazy idea that every detail of
tho cotton traffic, especially cotton fu-
! tures, is one vast propaganda estab-
I lished and maintained solely to de-
| press the price of cotton and take it
■ away from the producer as cheaply as
possible.
"The cotton echonges, of which
I there are but three in all the world
| which make the price of either spots
or futures, are those of New Orleans,
New York and Liverpool.
"The New York and New Orleans
j exchanges are the producers' ex-
changes, and the Liverpool exchange
| Is the consumer's exchange, and in my
} humble opinion both the producer and
J the consumer must have an exchange
| to create a balanced market. Alto-
gether the exchanges are clearing
houses for the world's cotton traffic,
j Without them it would be absolutely
Impossible for anyone to arrive at any-
thing like a fair and equitable price
for cotton.
"The application of the future trade
or hedge prerogative to the spot deal
Is what makes the cotton market and
makes of cottoi) a cash asset and sale-
able every day In the year at every
town and hamlet in the South. If the
market was deprived of this facility,
as both the Scott bill, which died In
the Senate the last session, and the
present Heflin bill would do, cotton
would at once become a commodity
like rice, sugar, tobacco, steel and oil,
and saleable only on demand. In
other words a farmer might drive to
town with his cotton, and the buyer,
unable to hedge his purchases by sell-
ing cotton against them, could only
buy when he had specific orders in
his pocket, and the farmer would
either have to haul It back home, or
leave It on consignment to be sold on
an order from the mills. To pass a
national law to prevent dealing in cot-
ton futures would so cripple the Am-
erican spot cotton markets that Liver-
pool would at once dominate the en-
tire cotton world and fix the price, be-
cause our cotton buyers would be
forced to transact all business on the
Liverpool Cotton Echange and thus
clothe that institution with all power,
which would be used to the disadvan-
tage of the producer and to the advan-
tage of the consumer, because Liver-
pool is the consumer's market, market.
The mills have a habit of getting "out
of the market" when the farmer has
cotton for sale.
"When the mills thus seek to de-
press prices by limiting demand, the
future contract system may be in-
voked to sustain prices, and there Is
no other agency that can create a de-
mand in such a contingency.
The autumns of 1909 and 1910 were
the first years in all the history of
cotton that tie producer got a good
price for cotton, while he had cotton
to sell, and that because the Amer-
ican cotton exchanges enjoyed all
their normal functions, which would
be limited by such legislation as the
Heflin bill. The buyers of actual cot-
ton are now able to buy cotton in the
absence of specific orders by protect-
ing their trades by future hedges.
"An enterprising Texas firm in De-
cember, 1909, did this very thing,
paying from 14 to 15 cents per pound
for spot cotton, hedged by future
sales, and thereby helped to maintain
good prices for the farmers spot cot-
ton. Is not this irrefutable proof of
the value and the necessity of a future
system? It Is the farmers' only de-
fense when the mills combine to keep
out of the market and refuse to buy
actual cotton. Is there any farmer
or politician so dull as not to com-
prehend this proposition?
"The terms of the anti-future bills
expressly forbid the purchase or sale
of cotton when the purchaser does not
intend to receive it, or the seller in-
tend to deliver it. The effect of such
drastic legislation would be to pre-
vent spot purchases secured by fu-
ture sales, and the mills would be in
complete control. Even a blind man
can see this.
"In all products not governed by ex-
changes, like cotton and grain, great
trusts have been organized and plun-
dered the people. See what the Fed-
eral Government has had to do to the
sugar, tobacco, steel, oil and other
trusts. I know that a corporation of
$1,000,000,000 was tentatively formed
to corner the cotton market had the
Scott bill passed.
"When the Scott bill came near
passing the Senate last February it
broke the price of cotton $15 per bale
because it would have killed the
American bull, the only friend to the
cotton market, while It could not
reach the European bear, the enemy
of high priced cotton. Not only this,
but the bears secretely encouraged the
introduction and passage of such legis-
lation, because it is always a blow
to cotton.
"I do not specially blame our Far-
mers' Union friends for supporting
anti-future bills, because It is always
represented to them as cotton gam-
bling, while the necessity of such a
No Part of Furnishings of the Home
Requires More Care In Its
Selection.
It Is important, when selecting a
wall paper to consider durability as
well as beauty, which Includes suit-
ability. White papers are not always
Ill-wearing, and one that is glazed will
resist- dirt and look bright and fresh
for a long time. Soft-surfaced whites,
or any other color, however, not only
pick up every mark and collect dust,
but also often shed a minute po-wder.
Red papers do not suit hot rooms,
but warm up north ones charmingly.
When turning an upstairs bedroom
Into a sitting room, the use of a rich
red paper will do much to remove
the plain effect that is often a draw-
back. Pink papers are always liked
in north and west bedrooms. A striped
pattern increase the apparent height
of the walls, while one with any kind
of horizontal lines, or checks will di-
minish it.
Large designs make a room look
smaller than it really Is, and a very
small pattern Is "wearisome to the eye.
Patternless papers help the effect ot
pictures and furniture and are popu-
lar on account of their restfulness,
while those in which the designs melt
into the color of the background are
to be recommended for the same rea-
sons.
Pale green and blue walls have &
cool influence and so are suitable for
sunny rooms, while cream and pale
gold are good for all aspectB. As ;
greens produce something to the ef-
fect of lawns and trees, they are de- j
lightful In town houses, and if used
In a country drawing-room there will
be no sharp contrast between indoors j
and out.
Raised papers are handsome, but J
'catch up dust, and those with gilt
lines should not be chosen for seaside
dwellings, as the strong air will soon j
tarnish them black. Only very well
lit rooms can stand brown papers,
which wear well and have a pleasing
and comfortable appearance.
«
CAN BE USED WITH ONE HAND
Egg Beater Recently Invented Is a
Decided Improvement in One
Important Particular.
An egg beater that a woman can
us© with one hand, leaving her other
hand free to pour other things Into
the bowl, has been designed by a New
York man. The implement consists
of a wooden handle with a wire stand-
ard with a circular disk at the bottom
r A ^
. Pointed ,
' Argument
Oal-u-flltaRoafini
ia the cheapest
In tho long run
for it never needs
painting or repairs.
First Cost—Last Cost.
It is waterproofed with
a "triple asphalt coating*
and weatherproofed both
aides with an''armor plating
of mica." Gives .protection
against firo and ligmmng.
EMM
The Ideal Roofing for any kind of a
k buildir.in any kind of a climate..
Haa stood tho "Test of Time.
It is put up in rolls of 108 sq.
i ft. with fino-coated, gal van-
ifed nails, cement and ill-
ustrated direction sheet.
Ask your dealer for Gal-
va-nite Itooflua or wnd
tor sample*) ana book-
lets, ,rOal-va-nlte
_f an Out-
side Proposi-
tion"
Ford Mff. Co.
Chicago
St, Paul
. Bt. Louis i
. Omaha t
V KansasJ
\ City f
Wrnoreb
_ iSho& Polishes
FINE ITY LARGEST VARIETY
IRflLilH
! <M !•
system for the actual legitimate spot
traffic is never explained to them. 1 ;
make this appeal to the public at
large, as well as to my audience, be- |
cause I do not want to see our people
commit themselves to a policy that i
will prove Injurious to the best in- :
terests of cotton but on the other hand [
I want to ask my hearers to at once
petition their Congressmen to oppose j
all legislation that will affect our cot- I
ton markets adversely, while a. the j
same time conferring a corresponding j
advantage on those markets to whom
we sell our cotton.
"Let our people wake up and study
the legitimate business which must
suffer by laws aimed at speculation.
I do not at all attempt a defense of
speculators, but realize that our leg-
islators are playing with fire when
they attempt legislation that may de-
feat the very ends they set out to at-
tain. Finally I submit that if such
bill as the Heflin bill should be-
come law that it would:
"(11 Unsettle and completely revo-
lutionize cotton prices by making
Liverpool the ruling cotton market of
the world.
"(2) That by depressing cotton val-
ues a corresponding depression would
take place in all Southern values, es-
pecially land values.
"(3) That it would require ten
times the banking capital available at
the South to move the crop.
"(4) And,-finally, that It, would re-1
suit In the cntralizatlon of the cot-
ton traffic of America to tho great
disadvantage of the cotton producer."
\
Women do Well in Marathon
A woman's Marathon race took place
from Polegate to Eastbourns, Eng., the
other day. Out of 18 competitors 10
finished the full distance of about four
and a half miles and the winner led
by only a few Inches.
Saves Time and Trouble.
V
Kll.l JQi<um
that positively contains OIL.
ladies' and children's boots and shoes, alilnef
! without rubbing, 25c. ••French Gloss. 10c.
8TAK combination for cleaning and polishing ail
I kinds of russet or lan slioes, 10c. ''Dandy' size 26c.
i OUICK WHITK (In liquid form with sponge)
quickly cleans and whitens dirty canvas shoos.
1 * lJABYELITE combination for gentlemen who-
I take pride in hating their shoes look Al. Restores
color and lustre to all black shoes. Polish with 0-
brush or cloth, 10 cents. •'Elite" site 26 cents.
If yonr dealer does not keep tho kind you want,,
■end us the price in stamps and wo will send you a
full site packago charges paid.
WHiTTEIVIORE BROS. & CO.,
20-26 Albany 8t., Cambridge. Ma.se.
TM Oldest and Largest Manufacturers oj
Shoe Polishes in the World.
It's difficult to discover a girl who
can't sing.
There Is no exevse for the dyspeptio, witlL
Garlield Tea accessible at every drugstore.
Poverty does not destrop virtue, nor
does wealth bestow it.—Yriarte.
All of That.
"Who is Nat Goodwin?"
"He's the center of the All-America1
married team."
running down from it. A revolving
wire beater, with two arms, fits
around the standard and has a spring
at the top. Pressure on the handle
causes the beater to revolve in one
direction while removal of the pres-
sure allows it to revolve in the oppo-
site direction.
Good Laundry Method.
Delicate articles such as jabots,
handerchiefs and other accessories,
may be beautifully laundered by tho
following method: Prepare a thin
starch by wetting a teaspoonful of
cornstarch in a little cold water. Add
two quarts of boiling water and boil
from 30 minutes to an hour. When
cold, strain. Have the articles to be
starched washed clean, dip them while
wet into the starch, wring dry, then
clap between the hands till partly dry.
Lay right side down 011 a thick ironing
pad and iron with a moderately hot
iron. Articles laundered in this way
have the sheer look and the crispness
of new goods.
Frame-Up.
One day Freddie and his sister
sneaked surreptitiously into the pan-
try on a foraging expedition. The*
only good things to eat they could
find were some cookies and a bowl of
whipped cream.
"Let's take the cookies," said his-
sister.
"I'd rather have the cookies my-
self," replied Freddie, "but if we took
them we'd be sure to get caught. The-
only safe thing to do is to take the-
cream and then shut the cat up in the-
pantry."
Happiness Postponed.
An awkward predicament in which
a sailor bridegroom and his bride were
placed in St. Mary Major's church, Ex-
eter, Devonshire, England, recently,
caused the postponement of their wed-
ding. The banns had been duly called
at the church, but when the parties-
presented themselves at the altar the
bridegroom, who had been recently
paid off from his ship at Portsmouth,
was unable to produce the necessary
permission from his commander. The
bride swooned, and eventually re-
turned home, while the bridegroom
left for Plymouth to get the required
document.
Rolled Oats Bread.
Two cups of rolled oats, five cups of
flour, two cups of boiled water, one-
lialf cup of molasses, one-half table-
spoon salt, one tablespoon butter, one
cake of compressed yeast dissolved in
one-half cup of lukewarm water. Add
boiling water to rolled oats and let
stand one hour; add molasses, salt,
butter, dissolved yeast cake and flour;
let rise until double in bulk, beat
thoroughly—use hand to shape—turn
into buttered bread pans, let rise
again, and bake. Two loaves or four
small ones.
To Keep Nuts Fresh
If walnuts or any other kind of
nuts are packed in layers of sand
and kept in a cool place, they will
keep fresh for an indefinite period.
Soak them in warm water for an hour
before using if you would have them
peel as if they had just beem gath-
ered fresh from the tree.
Soda Cake.
One pound of flour, half pound of
currants, one-fourth of a pound of
brown sugar, a half cupful of butter,
two eggs, two teaspoonfuls of treacle,
one teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda
and half a pint of milk.
Mix the flour and soda, rub in the
butter, add sugar and currants, then
the treacle, milk and beaten eggs. Deat
well together, fill in two well but-
tered cake molds and bake in a mod-
erately hot oven for about one hour.
NO WORDS WASTED
A Swift Transformation Briefly De-
scribed.
About food, the following brief but
emphatic letter from a Georgia wom-
an goes straight to the point and is
convincing.
"My frequent attacks of indigestion
and palpitation of the heart cul-
minated in a sudden and desperate ill-
ness, from which I arose enfeebled in
mind and body. The doctor advised
me to live on cereals, but none of
them agreed with me until I tried
Grape-Nuts food and Postum.
"The more I used of them the more
I felt convinced that they were just
what 1 needed, and in a Bhort time
th«y made a different woman of me.
My stomach and heart troubles disap-
peared as if by magic, and my mind
was restored and is as clear as it ever
was.
"I gained flesh and strength so rap-
idly that my friends were astonished.
Postum and Grape-Nuts have benefited
me so greatly that 1 am glad to bear
this testimony." Namo given by
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
"There's a reason," and it is explained
In the little book, "Tho Road to Well-
ville," in Pkgs.
Ever rend llie nbove letterf A lew
one appeni-N from time to time. They
~~ ' und full of Uuimhu
ire icciiulue, true,
**Uere«t.
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The Paden Herald (Paden, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, March 29, 1912, newspaper, March 29, 1912; Paden, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc144650/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.