The Daily Ardmoreite. (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 243, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1912 Page: 4 of 8
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Ardmore Friday. July 5 1912
THE DAILY AROMOREITE
PACE FOUR
- UT (MUR CRUCE DOES CLASSir SLD
assras&s NEEDS NO UNDOING :rs ADVERTISING
C. L UYILNB Ed?or cratic voteri at the ilite primary x1-LLJj
JOHN F. EASLEY -"'tor fc m2 feOirMP
Entered at the Postoffi-e at Ardmore Tbe Oklahoma Evening News of ( after a thorough investigation-a . NT
as Second-flats Matter. rfCelt date comments quite elabo- complete inquiry Into the merit DISTRICT CLERK. C mJ
THE OFFICIAL PAPER OF CARTER
COUNTY AND THE CITY
OF ARDMORE
If it Is In The Arduiore.te it is legal
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
The Daily Aremoreue.
...$3.00
One Year
One Month
One W eek
.50
.15
The Weekly A'dmoreite.
One Year Ly Ma.l $1
Six Moi.tns f
Three .Months -J
Any erroneous reflection on tbe
character standing or reputation ot
any person firm or corporation
which may appear in the columns of
Tbe Ardmoreite will be gladly cor-
rected upon its being brought to the
attention of tbe management.
Phones.
Business Manager s Oflice
City Editor's Office
Long Distance
.538
. 5
.538
Ardmore Friday July 5 1912
THE GOVERNORS ECONOMY.
The Ardmoreite has repeatedly
stated that when Governor Cruce
leaves the gubernatorial chair he
will be the most popular man in tho
state. Many attempts have been
made to cause his administration to
be unpopular. Forces are always
at work to produce disruptions. Some
of the forces may be well meant by
misguided friends while others are
made through cunnings and evil de-
signs. But Oklahoma is now wrought up
over its tax rate more than over any
other one thing and Governor Cruce
is pursuing a policy along this line
that meets with the wishes of every
man in the state without regard to
political affiliations. At the close
of the first full fiscal year which he
has served as governor he Issues a
statement of the expenses of his do-
partmtut and shows that almost two.
thirds of the amount of money a;
preprinted to his department will
be returned to the state treasury.
Lee Cruce haB UHed the money of
tlie mate as he would use money
he earned himself lie has given
efficient government but he h
made efficiency at an economical
price. More than this he warned
every state department to be careful
in its expenditures and has requested
them to make full statements as lie
has done. The law does not require
the governor to make an account I
to any person for his expenditures
but he has mnile a reort to all
the people and has given the report
to the press for publication.
L
MEET WITH WILSON
CHAIRMAN WILL BE NAMED AT
CHICAGO JULY 15. BRYAN'S
BROTHER A VISITOR.
Seagirt N. J July 4. The demo-
cratic national committee arrived
tit Seagirt shortly before 3 o'clock
t ti its afternoon and proceeded directly
to Governor Wilson's cottage where
luncheon was awaiting them on the
lawn.
The committee decided after lunch-
eon here today to meet with Gov.
Wilson in Chicago on July 13 for
the electing a chairman and other
officers.
Gov. Wilson was highly gratified
at the stand taken by Gov. Osborne
of Michigan with regard to Col.
Roosevelt and himself.
"This is very interesting indeed.
Gov. Wilson said after reading Gov.
Osborn's statement today. "I just
don't know what to say about It ex-
cept that it is most significant Os-
born is a inan of force; he knows
his own mind. What he says pleases
me greatly particularly what he
says about me."
Gov. Wilson said that he had not
been given time as yet by his callers
thoroughly to digest the party plat-
form and hence he Intended to re-
serve all comment thereon for his
speech of acceptance.
This -with plans for his formal
announcement of his nomination
recent date comments quite elabo-
Irately upon the condition of affairs; and demerits of each and every ap-
' which seem to unfortunately exist ptlcant for these positions he the
! between Gov. Cruce and certain governor w as well and fully satis -
members of the State Board of Ed-; fled in his own mind that he was
' ucation selecting men than whom there mere
The news item referred to mu-1
mates that the governor has request
ed two members of the said board;! uch as to make them the best
to resign before action will be in the interests of education that
taken uDon certain important mat
ters by the board of which Governor Had these men not have beenall
Cruce Is ex-officio a member. I that could have been required had
If the request really had emanated ; they not have been honest upright
from the chief executive of Oklaho- ' and men of principle we know
ma and for the reason set forth 1 j knowing Lee Cruce as we do that
innuendo matters In the state edi ! they would never have been select-
cation board are In bad shape. ed by him to fill the most important
But we cannot knowing personally i positions as members of the Board
as .we do each member of the said 1
board bring ourselves to look upon
the matter as being of any re-i'
serious ImporL
Each and every member of this
state education board Is a good man
men tried and true men who are
thoroughly trained in the science of
education men who have spent the
greater part of their lives In the at-
mosphere of the school room and
are most completely familiar with
the workings of a broad school
system.
These men the members of the
State Hoard of Education were ap-
pointed by Governor Cruce to their
present positions appointed because
were discussed this afternoon with
the national committee. The govern-
or said he was taking a "theoretic
holiday" he had given his stenog-
rapher the day off and expected to
send no letters or telegrams.
Representative Burleson of Texas
who has long supported the governor
was one of the first callers today.
He spent half an hour with the nom-
inee. Another visitor was Charles
W. Bryan a brother of Willam J.
Bryan. He was .closeted with the
governor for more than half an hour.
Mr. Bryan declined to make public
the topics of discussion and said
his call was largely nodal.
"I conveyed to Mrs. Wilson" he
I said "heartiest congratulations and
best wishes from Col. Bryan's wife."
Mr. Bryan said that his brother
would doubtless be found on the
stump for Governor Wilson through-
out the campaign. A group of en-
thusiastic Texans brought Governor
Wilson as a trophy the lorm-star
flag -which floated over their dele-
gation at the convention.
Tho governor's afternoon callers
included B. G. Moore of Philadelphia
president of tho Sons of Delaware
and Victor Levin also of Philadel-
phia. Pleasant A. Stovall of Savannah
who knew Governor Wilson when ho
was shortstop on the "Globe Dixie"
baseball team at AugiiBta also greet-
ed tho governor. Mr. Stovall enter-
tallied the governor and his friends
with stories of the governor's boy-
hood days In Georgia.
John D. McNeel. private secretary
to Governor O'Neal of Alabama call-
ed to offer the services of his chief
during the campaign as did Major D.
Woodward of Boston who was in
charge of Governor Foss' campaign
at Baltimore. Major Woodward sug-
gested that Governor Foss would be
willing to Invade Vermont In Govern-
or Wilson's Interest.
"We believe" ho said "that If
Governor Wilson and Governor Foss
speak In Vermont we will carry the
state at the November election."
Governor Wilson presented the
governor's prize for marksmanship
this afternoon to Captain Charles
F. Sylvester of the Second regiment
N. O. N. J. He had a score of 13S
out of a possible 130. Captain Syl-
vester was escorted from the rifle
range near here to tbe governor's
cottage in his company. .
In presenting the trophy.Govern-
or Wilson said:
"War Is not pleasant to contem-
plate but It is well to be prepared
for it at all times. The etraighter
you shoot the sooner the war Is
over. The sooner the more men
you kill right away at the beginning
the fewer you will have to kill In
the long run. Marksmanship Is a
very important part of the training
for preparation for war.'
complete inquiry Into the merit
none better. None better as men
' and as men w hose life's work had
V. 1 .1 ..1 4
lie cvuiu Btrievu
of Education of the State of Okla
homa. We know as we said a mo
ment ago each and every member
of this board and iwe know Iee
Cruce.
We have known Lee Cruce for
years; known him as man and gov-
ernor perhaps more intimately than
moat others. And we have always
known him for a careful and a con-
scientious business man a business
man who thinks well and deeply
before he acts a business man whose
rare acumen has prevented him from
making blunders or serious mistakes.
And knowing him as we do know-
ing Iee Cruce the man and Lee Cruce
the governor we know that what
be does never needs undoing.
Acting always In the Interests of
what a careful study of state con-
ditions we say agaln-what Lee Cruca
once does needs no undoing.
First Presbyterian Church.
Services Sunday at the church at
II a. m. and at tho Airdome at 8:30
p. m.
Sunday School at 9:45 a. m.
Meeting of session at 10:45 a. m.
The pastor urges that all the offi-
cers and teachers of the Sunday
School attend the morning serlvce.
The general public is cordially in-
vited to both services.
CHAS. C. WEITJI. Pastor.
Northeast Ardmore.
Preaching under the tent Sunday
July 7 at It a. m. and 8:13 p. m. Geo.
W. Lewis will hold a service at 3:30
for men and boys only. Come to the
men's service.
First Christian Church.
Sunday School 9:45 a. m. I. R. Ma-
son Supt.
Preaching 11 a. m. and 8:15 p. m.
The regular monthly meeting or the
'.V. B. M. will be held at the church
Sunday at 3 p. m.
Ladies' Aid Society will meet at
the church Tuesday at 4 p. m.
Prayer meeting Wednesday even-
ing. A cordial invitation Is extended to
all.
SPecial Serie'of Sermons.
Beginning Sunday night. Rev. C. R.
Gray will preach a series of four ser-
mons at the Broadway Methodist
church entitled:
'Twentieth Century Interpretation
of the Garden of Eden."
The subjects and dates will be as
follows:
July 7 8:30 p. m. Beginnings.
July 14 8:30 p. m The Fruit of
the Tree.
July 21 8:30 p. m. The Curse.
July 28 8:30 p. m. Paradise Re-
gained. Eevryone Is invited to hear these
sermons and as the first is closely
related to the other three It would he
best to hear them from the first. All
the regular services w ill be held Sun-
day. The pastor will preach at 11 a.
m. Junior League at 5 p. m. Senior
League at 7:30 p. in.
Come and worship with us.
Christian Science.
.Services 11 a. m.
. Subject God.
Golden text: 11 Samuel 22:23.
Responsive reading: Selections
or-
W0SS:
FRFin HAYME.
(Ke-eiecuon.)
COUNTY TREASURER.
L R. BEST.
L. J. AKERS of Woodford.
JOHN J. YELL.
REGISTER OF DEED8.
VIRGIL JOHNSON.
S. S. TOLSON.
vULL ti. GARDNER of Glenn.
SHELTON W. TYER.
W. B. FRAME.
CAPTAIN W. R. WOOD.
COUNTY ATTORNEY.
A. J. HARDY.
L. G. SHELTON.
R. F. (Bob) TURNER.
GUY K S1GLER.
W. R. BLEAKMORE.
COUNTY JUDGE.
W. FRANKLIN BOURLAND.
W. F. FREEMAN.
M. F. WINFREY.
1. R. MASON.
FOR CONGRESSMAN AT LARGE.
Vote for Three.)
PAT GOULDING of Enid.
BOB ECHOLS of Elk City.
Wm. M. FRANKLIN of Madill.
FRED P. BRANSON.
FOR REPRESENTATIVE.
D. T. REXROAT.
(Re-election.)
O. K. DARDEN.
LYRON DREW.
CONSTABLE.
(Ardmore Township.)
JA2JES DUSTON.
(Re-election.)
COUNTY WEIGHER.
SMITH REDMAN.
LEE TODD of Hewitt.
W. J. BROWN.
R. M. D1LLARD.
For County Clerk.
JOE W. MOORE.
B. W. DUKE.
(For re-ele-nion to second term.)
COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
District No. 2.
B. C. RICKETS.
W. M KIKKPATRICK.
GEORGE L. EVANS of Newport.
S. I. BUTLER.
COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
District No. 1.
G. W. (Bud) Young of Berwyn
J. M. BA1RD.
FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER.
District No. 3.
JAMES R. TALIAFERRO
of Lone Grove.
W. B. HUDGINS.
FOR COUNTY ASSESSOR.
SOL F. KIMBRELL.
J. S. CLARKSON.
GEORGE M. SIIARROCK.
SHERIFF.
DICK HIGNIGHT.
BUCK GARRETT.
DAN BLACKBURN.
FOR COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT.
GEORGE J. WILLIAMS.
MRS. MARY V. NIBLACK.
L. M. THURSTON.
FOR CONGRESSMAN FOURTH
DISTRICT.
R. H. STANLEY of Hugo.
FOR THE STATE SENATE:
FRAZIER ELLIS.
JESSE L. JORDAN.
TOWNSHIP ANNOUNCEMENTS
JUSTICE OF PEACE.
(Ardmore Township.)
(Two to vote for.)
HAL M. CANNON.
(Re-election.)
D. W. BUTCHER.
For Con"able:
J. A. SANDERS.
For Jlistlce of the Peace
Graham Township.
E. R. POOLE.
MORGAN TOWNSHIP.
For Justice of the Peace.
WADE MORSE.
from 2nd Samuel.
Sunday school 10 a. m.
Wednesday evening testimonial
services 8 p. m.
Our church home is on West
Broadway. All are invited to attend
our services.
Dysentery Is always serious and
often a dangerous disease but it
can be cured. Chamberlain's Colic
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy has
cured it even when malignant and
epidemic. For sale by all dealers.
NO ADVERTISEMENTS FOR THIS COLUMN AMOUNTING TO LESS
THAN ONE DOLLAR WILL BE ACCEPTED UNLESS THE CASH ACCOM
PANIES THE AD. ADS THAT .AMOUNT TO MORE THAN ONE DOLLAR
WILL EE CHARGED TO ANY RESPONSIBLE PERSON.
MISCELLANEOUS.
J. R. DEXTER.
Farm Loans.
Low Rates. Easy Terms.
Ardmore Okla.
I SELL AND RENT TYPEWRITERS
and handle ribbons carbon paper
oil etc. G. P. Selvidge. Phone 310.
MEN Learn the barber trade. Be
your own boss. Best chance in
the world for small capital. Prac-
tice and Instructions without limit
to time. Catalogue free. Write
at once. Moler Barber College
Kansas City Mo.
FOR TRADE 160 acres CO in cul-
tivation good water good climate
good land lots of all kinds of
fruit for family use. 90 miles
southwest of St. Louis on Frisco
for grocery stock general stock
merchandise or hotel worth $3-
500 or $4000. See W. A. Ed-
wards. 4-tf
WANTED
WANTED Horse to keep for feed.
Will take good care of him. Apply
Ardmoreite. 2-3
WANTED To teach you Shorthand
at home. Mail Course in Spencerlan
Shorthand $10. Easily learned.
Easily written. Easily read. Sel-
vidge Business College Ardmore
Okla.
ESTIMATE OF SCHOOL DISTRICT
19
To the Excise Board of Carter County
Oklahoma.
We hand you herewith Report of
the estimated expense of School Dis-
trict No. 19 for the Fiscal Year End-
ing Juno 30th 1913.
From State Apportionment
(School Land Lease and
Loan Funds and State
Levy) about $1.70 per
pupil (a) $3029.40
Amount Needed for General Fund.
For salary of 42 Teacheis. . .$21815.00
For Rents Repair and Fuel 1900.00
For Library and School Ap-
paratus STjO.OO
Street Improvement Tax... 400.00
Janitors 2615.00
Truant Ofticer and Steno-
grapher 540.00
Miscellaneous 1000.00
Clerk 300.00
Total Needed (B) $32420.00
Less Amount frem Other
Sources and Cash on
Hand (Total A) 3.029.40
Net Amount Needed from
General Fund Levy (To-
tal B Less Total A) 29361.60
An cunt Ncce'sary for Interest and
Sinking Fund.
Amount of Bonds outstand-
ing . $160000X0
Interest to be
Paul $8000.00
Sinking Fund to
be raised 3f-00.00
Total $11600.00
W the trustees of School District
No. 19 do hereby certify that tht
above estimates were made by the
School Board at a meeting held on the
First day of July 1912.
Signed
R. A. HEFNER
President.
3-4 G. H. BRUCE Clerk.
Insect Bite Costs Leg.
A Boston man lost his log from
the bite of an Insect two years be-
fore. To avert such calamities from
stings and bites of insects use Buck-
Ion's Arnica Salve promptly to kill
the poison and prevent Inflamma-
tion swelling and pain. Heals burns
boils ulcers piles eczema ruts
bruises. Only 25c at Ringer Drug
C.i.
Refrigerators good ones the kind
to buy the kind to have In your
home at YOUR OWN PRICE. We
are closing out our line never to
handle them any more.
J. B. SPRAG1NS HARDWARE CO.
Read tb Waii Ada. Wortn while
fOR RENT
FOR RENT C-room house corner
Broadway and D street N. V.
J. B. Spragins. 9-tI
FOR RENT House 4 large rooms
large Lara cellar city water or-
chard some of peaches ripe.
J. S. Lane Phone 621. 4-3
FOR RENT Very desirable 4 -room
cottage on West Main close in.
All conveniences. Phone 42.
3-6
FOR RENT Modern 7-room house
now occupied by C. H. Cook. See
Julius Kabn C St. S. W Phone
225. 5-lm
FOR RENT Large well-furnished
southeast light houskeeping rooms
modern and close in. Summer
rates. 514 1st avenue southwest.
Phone 680. ' 3tf
FOR SALE
FOR SALE Indian Cornish hens and
Pekin ducks. E. D. Haight. Z-i
FOR SALE OR RENT very cheap a
few nice refrigerators. J. Gold-
smith's Loan Office. 16-lm
FOR SALE City Fish Market a bar-
gain. Investigate. 3-2
MY HOME AND FARMS FOR SALE
My home on C street southwest
is one of tbe choice locations in
Ardmore choice in every respect. I
have all kinds of farms and close-
in acreage property desirable for
subdivisions In lots or 5-acre
tracts. Also my 40-acre Elberta
orchard that never fails in crops
and has 6000 bushels on it today.
It is a bargain and a moneymaker.
Also Alfalfa Vale farm goes too.
Must sell. See me. W. P. Poland
Ardmore Okla. 2-Ct
LOST AND FOUND.
FOUND On road between Mount
Washington school and Ardmore
lady's hand bag. Owner can obtain
same by calling at Ardmoreite and
paying for thi3 adevrtlsement. 2-3
Confederates Meet Sunday.
The members of John H. Morgan
Camp U. C. V. are reminded that
the meeting Sunday will be held at
the State Home beginning at 3:30 p.
m. All members are requested
be present at the meeting.
J. R. PULLIAM
Commander
;
Think of ALBATROSS when J0i
see your grocer.
Bands of Music
Fire Works
A Gala Day
A Holiday
Pink Lem'nade
Steam Swing
Something
Doing
Every Minute
SPEND
JULY 4
IN
Ardmore
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Easley, John F. The Daily Ardmoreite. (Ardmore, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 243, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1912, newspaper, July 5, 1912; Ardmore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc145910/m1/4/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.