The Hartshorne Sun. (Hartshorne, Indian Terr.), Vol. 13, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1907 Page: 3 of 8
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C( iiccted and Compiled by The Democratic Press Surcau
Lee Hotel. Oklahoma City
WHAT TAFT REALLY 8AID
Taft's Oklahoma Cll
ak. ii in .shorthand ! y iw« export st'"-o
logr'aphers and an cvimlaatlon of the
j miles taken slmr.* that Taft did n t
_ i> that ho would vote against tho eon
WHAT DOES FRANTZ AND THE BE-1,tn Urn b "..use. , r for the was..,,
PUBLICAN TICKET STAND FOR? I that ho would liu ci nfldent that there
For tlif defeat the constitution. wmuM ho a ilew enabling act. What
For the del>-at of lli« !.•:! . ; vrvnut |ho did i .>• in ollect was that re would
law.
F<
not vnto auai.isi. It with any such >\
tho defeat of t!. initial ve ai'd . pectation for tie re would prohablv f
referendum j low .%> organlzation-of the Indian T.r
For the defeat of > .tehood at:d the j 1 itory until the people could Ret read>
promise "f a new enabling aet | i'or j int statehood 'a-id then you
For mixed c >:iches and wailing | would pass In with a constitution madi
rooms and the appoli.tnunt of nesroos
authority over white
WHAT HASKELL AND THE DEMO-
' CRATIC TICKET STANDS FOR
Fir.' statehood.
F r the constitution.
For all the blessings of aolf gov-
'irament.
For tho strict ry,illations of trust.-
and monupolh <
For a competent railroad commis-
sion with power ;o enforce the laws
against rate disorlininatioa
1'\)t separate sclic Is, separate | to p . iti 'ns of
coaches and ;eparme waiting roems an(j women.
tor the white ami negro races. For government by injunction aud to
For tho initiative and referendum, fasten u; on the state without llm!:i-
whicb reserves to the poo|>le their tion the arbitrary and autocratic pov.
sovereignity ami places a lasting check er 0f judges In ev. rv class of contempt
un every form of -pedal or class leg- cases.
IslalloD. ' Frantz and the republican ticket are
Pot the assessment of property at |agalmt everything that the pe<
its cash marke; value and the llmita-1 these two territories have bo,
"on <f the rate of tax levy to 3314 maOrLug of their nil—.; f r v.^rs
wills <*i the one hundred dollars valu- They opnse progress I:;. raising a lhe> would accept any kind f a gov
atlon In the country and 43 H mills on hue and cry against features <>r tho eminent the corporations and tin
ti*' one hundred d dlurs in tho city. , ..jstiiutlon they hape to encompass its bureaucrats were willing to concd
Fod n fellow .servant law; for a defeat and put the people of these tw.i them. His meaning is plain and h's
Jiiln. Inspection law; for the abolltioi, territories back into the hands of the language Is not capable of any oth-r
<>f eli lid labor in themines and fee- carpet bagers fur further looting and rational construction Mr Taft n,u-
tories; for a c mpl ory school law and exploitation veye the impression to tho committee
'! frf.1' " ' ' Frantz and his party stand for a . of republicans led hv Jake Hanton
l-orithe host sys.em of public school® , continuation of the federal control and that Roosevelt w uld have to no.
thai, can he devised and f«. the liberal oarpc t bag goveiument. the eo„:„ltu!im if the people ratHi-.l
support and encouragement of the Haskell and his part, stand for in, it. lie also wired hack from Jopl't,
tsplendid big ier insi.nations of learn- mediate statehood and the enjoymen; that he meant to give the impression
lng which the government has so Ron-, I, y the people of every right and privil- that the president would aprove ,
"eruusly endowed }„• grants f public egeofselfgovornmo.it which they an The qn stlon in then will the voters d •
11( * | entitled to under the federal constitu foat the constitution and vote upon
, / and tll° democrat.c ticket j tion and their own splendid charter f themselves a oontlnuati n of carpet
baic government, or ratify the consti-
tution and achieve at once the long
up by persons who am not so patriotic
and not so full of the desire to exact-
ly ascertain the will of the people."
What did Mr. Taft mean by this su:
castle fling at the motives of the men
who consistently carried out their c in-
mission from the people to write this
constitution? He meant that tliei- •
terri'i rjs-s would fay under carpet'1 I
le « i no -mment until the people were pelit-
i de- ically starved Into submission and re
s. diu-i'd to such servile condition thai
stand for every one of the wine pre liberty.
■visions of the people—and by that we
rr.klUP men : I*e™el°ber- votera ,h;U lf you ar" Msought privilege of self government? -
and the large and small business men statehood you musl vote for the const!- Oklahoman
of the new state ordered, by their res- tutinn. If you want the constitution _ 1
tho"ennst1't<i,il'nnVOl''S' W"tt0n lnt" J,'"1 lnl9|(',frect '"ust v" " for the! The majority of every democratic
Th democrat.e candidates, lor the revub- nominee cn the slate ticket was in-
rhe State Capital and other ropub- Mean state ticket stands pledged to created a thousand or more vot-s b -
e,nocrn,Per'h ' V °"t C0nst,ltutl0n ''-v f;llr cause of the killing of poor ol Svlvest-
democrats nave made a clean cam means or foul. You can settle the . r Mm-Hc- .*\,i .in i '•
palgn and have not Indulged in per-'matter by placing vour cross in th P">n
sonal abuse and mud-throwing. We circle under the rooster and stampin
wish we could say as much for tho i In the square opositc
•bourbon reactionists who are trying to question. "Shall the constitution be rat-lsvstom. Thev want stntehocd
defeat Ilnsktll and the constitution." ilied "" „ , ' , statet1"'(1
Muskogee Times-Democrat.
NOT THE TIME TO STOP.
•Smv the Possibilities In the
!• Situation.
Jim Johnstone, the famous b;iso-
hall umpire, said recently in New
York that baseball crowds were far
kinder to umpires than they used
to be
"This is true of theater crowds,
• fcoo^'-B^td Mr Johnstone. "W1
j)rQyJpclal touring companies in the
i . mai i eati • nt was regulaily ex-
pected. In fact, the companies prof-
ited by it in more ways than one.
"I know of a corupan.v that wa -
playing 'The Broken Vow* In Paint
Itock, a one niirht stand. The audi-
ence didn't like The Broken Vow.' and
crps, cabbages und potatoes rained
\ the stage.
'. ill the play went on. The hero
raved through his endless speeches,
dodging an onion or a baseball < v.-ry
other minute, and pretty soro from
those missiles that he hadn't been
abH to dodge.
"Hut finally a gallery auditor in a
paroxysm of rase and scorn hurled a
heavy boot, and the actor, thoroughly
alarmed, started to retreat.
" 'Keep on playing, you fool/ kissed
the manager from the wings, as ho
hooked in the boot with an umbrella.
'Keep on till we get the other one.'"
PRESCRIP'. IONS IN LATIN.
The Public Should Have Them Trans
lated by the Druggists.
What virtue is there ia the secrecy
with which the doctor hedges nbout
his profession?
"Professional etiquette'' occupies a
TRACKS EVIL DOERS
WOMAN DETECTIVE FEARLESS IN
HER WORK.
Cthsl King Resnons-ble for the Break
irg Up of Many Gangs bf Crim-
inals—Able to Take Care of
Herself.
APPEAL THAT WAS HEEDED.
Must Also Have Been Foiiowe|
of the Gentle Art-
John Quinc.y Adams, of MascachV
who dieJ
a1' ' ' ago, was very fon((
of : hint and not especially fond
: his legal profersion.
daj the story runs, a case id
w&3 down fo|
trial in a Massachu etts court. Mf
appearanoil
j but sent a letter to the judge.
read it, and theij
I i il <• ea; e with tho announce
j merit:
detained on im|
j portant business."
It wa aft ward !••:.rned hy a
lams that the letter reacj
I as follows:
r Jud I'tir the sake of old
' • • ' Walton ph ase continue
Mil Friday. The smelta
Should you meat a good-looking
sailor hoy, with a complexion some-
thing too good for one who follows thw
#€■:«. take a second look at him. It
may t e Kth d King, th" woman detec-
tive of Philadelphia, in one of her
many disguises.
lake a searching glance at the mcs-
seuper boy who run , wi*h head down,
to deliver a missive. It in possible
that the female leuih may be hiding
her Identity within the blue suit.
Look around you in opium-scented
' 'hinatown The dapper woman who biting, and I can't leave.'
trips past the lookout at the gambling
Joint, with a side glance at the closed
door, may be pretty Kthel King ia the
costume of her sex. but sent on a
mission that is very unusual to &
woman.
At home Miss King lives a quiet
ami secluded life. Few of her associ-
ates in the boarding house at. which
lie has her room know what a dig
tin^wlshed personage is the dark-eyed
Rirl who Is <• frequently away on
mysterious trips.
Absolutely without f«'ar Miss King
ha« accepted any dangerous work that
lias come to her in the line of duty
6he has donned the uniform of a
I'nited Statts sailor and haunted th'
docks and navy yard vicinity in searck
CHILDREN TORTURED.
rl H id Running Sores from Eczcma|
—Doy Tortured by Poison Oak-
Both Cured by Cuticura.
prominent [daoo in tho on-rlcninm ol for information ronardlng sailor crlin
every medical school, and when strict : ina|4
I; pie regardless of politics, have had
ly analyzed "professional etiquette" I
seems to mean "doing what is liest for
tho doctor, individually and col-
lectively."
Among the things that "Is best for i
the doctor" is tho writing of his pro-
scriptions in Latin, and thus keeping thc nnifonn of tho messenger hoy and
the public in Ignorance not only of dld valuable work In breaking up a
what it Is taking fur its Ills, but fore- gell^ of |liirer,nw an„ ,.,ever swln
lng a - all upon tho doctn each time ()los that th- voungsters had carried
a prescription is needed
fieing n small woman and looking
rather diminutive In hoys' clothes
Miss King had no difficulty in assum-
ing the character of a district mes
singer Mercury. She readily assumed
! Ihe jargon of the corps, as well as
take this
What Frantz s Election Means
CAMPAIGN FALSEHOODS o, me iota, tax may be applied for, Those are some of the reasons why
The republicans are trying to In-! same restrictions nr ' T
fluence voters t i opp £,e the constitu- made except that ten mills or o vi .'Ti V" , eorj'or!1,ions il!ld
tion on the pleas that the tax provl cent additional is -ill.iwed to t' in' H aro ''"'fulating such
Blnn of that document means almost levied for city pm':,oses. making the: eon^iZlon^ and trjrlnB 10 def"Ut th"
( nfiscatlon of property, and there ignite of taxation not higher than 04 _ _ _
no limit to the reckless statement they;8M00 per cent in cities. I Some of the out- Mow,, republican,
are spreading over the state to catch This is the highest lew ti ,• i rt puuin. ins
the unwary. Lade anl aa pSS L lo be assftsed ^ T* "Dd
Among other classes of voters hey at its cash market value it Is not pi ob- "" r.'vtion commit I ««h
nre trying to argue that the constitu able that any county or district in He ' 8 "Hl l,iH|'01'1!"S themselves as
tion makes tho tax levy so low that I State will ever levy m re than oik-'""""" ''u' verjr l!rsl 1,1 ,ll:' fleet at
schools can not bo maintained more: half the maximum allowed. The as-j*'le b,nw"nt. There is no use
than two months in the year and tho j sessment of property at. its cash 'oriwinr!n8 l,nylhe aegro is yours hy
expenses of c unty and state govern-1 market value means that the railroads '''' '' • 8"lleltation, and natural se-
mont can not he maintained. Doth j which charge freight and passeager1 ant? 'v<1" ' stand for the
of these statements cannot be true I rates based on a valuation of $60,0001 "I"1-1'1 V and tho Intimate association
the facts are that both are wilful and per mile shall not b. listed for raxe. Political nigger deni :nds. Vou
malicious lies, circulated to mislead I at three to live thousan . • .< per ' ' "i,i ! 1,,m- -vou <i n'l want to lose
the voters. The truth is that the tax j mile, but must pay on approximately Vl,u In 3t recognise him a^i
lrvy for all purposes is limited out what it cost to build and operate mainstay of your pariy in OU:a
side of the cities and Incorporate^ them. It means that a great |> rtlon 1 '
towns to33% mills on Ihe one hundriflof the corporate wealth ol the : tat ■ —
dollars valuation or 03 35 100 per cent ' which has hitherto . scaped taxation Mr(5,,lr0 made his flrat campaign on
''■here most farmers already pay from j will be compelled to come in and pav separate statehood; his second cum-
tin: to eight per cent. its pro rata share with you, Mr. Voter, palgn he made on joint statehood and
The cnfrtl.utton provides that 37 when the now constitution goes into his present campaign he is making
nulls of this amount or more than one- ^rr.^i I . " '
In plain and unmistakable English
the writing of prescriptions In Latin
makes business for the doctors.
Let us say that you have the ague
■ You had it last year and the year be-
: fore. Each time you have visited the
doctor and he has prescribed for you
—in Latin. You have never known
what he has given you for the disease,
and so each time you are forced to go
j to him again and give him ai. oppor-
i tunity to repeat his proscription—In
Latin, aud his fee—in dollars.
If you ask the doctor why he uses
Latin in writing his prescriptions, why
he writes "aqua" when he means wa
ter, he will give yon a technical dis- j
i sertation on the purity of the Latin j
language, and the fact that all words
! are derived from it, etc. It will be a j
dissertation that you may not bo able
I to answer, but it will hardly convince ,
you.
It would he a good thing for tho pub- .
lie to devise a little code of ethics of
! its own; ethics that will be "a good
thing for the public Individually and
collectively."
Let us apply one of the rules of this j
code of ethics to you, the Individual.
You rail In tho physician when you
ha«ve the ague, the grippe, or any of
the other Ills to which human flesh is
heir, and which you may have again
some day. The doctor prescribes—in
Latin, and you take this, to you, mean-
ingless scribble to tho druggist to
have it compounded. Right here is
where you cone in. If you are wise
I Say to the druggist that you want a
translation of that prescription. It is
your privilege to know what you are
taking. While the doctor's code of
ethics may not recognize this right It
is yours just the same.
With the translated prescription in
your possession you have two distinct
advantages. Vou I.now what you are
taking, and should you wish to call
some other doctor at some time you
will be able to tell him what drugs you
have been putting Into your system,
and nis i if you should have the same
disease a:a I a you can save yourself
a visit to the doctor, and his fee, by
taking this translated prescription to
the druggist once more and having it
refilled.
She Experimented.
A little girl of live was taken ti
church one Sunday, and listened wit!
unexpected attention to the sermon
which graphically told the story ol
on for years at the expense of the
company and Its customers.
She learned that the boys were in
the habit of meeting In the street aud
exchanging caps, so that should a
comprint he made of money collected
on prepaid messages, or of cash miss-
ing from envelopes intrusted to the
boys for delivery, it would be easy to
eslablish an alibi. Miss King astound-
ed the management of the company
hy her revelations concerning the
tricks of the messenger hoys and en-
abled the regular sleuths of the con-
cern to checkmate the systematic
stealings and guard against a repetl
tion of them.
As a scullery girl Miss King assist-
ed in the arrest of a notorious woman
thief who had been in the habit of
hiring out as a domestic for the pur-
pose of allowing her criitinal frionds
| lo enter and rob the house at night,
' The woman sleuth washed d'shes and
' watched the other woman, and when
the critical time came, and the house
was raided iu the dead of night, the
would-be thieves were caught In a
trap.
Miss Kinn has assisted in the sup-
pro.ion of tho opium lialfle and ol
the gambling di ns of-Chinatown. She
has made frl -nds with the yellow man
■ind in due Mm- betrayed him t the
police. She has bet-ii threa'oned time
and again, but has not so iar been at-
tacked. Threats she ignores, and an-
one who has talked with her for a
time is linpre sed with the Idea that
In a tight corner slu could well take
care of herself, for, as shi- says:
"A woman Is as good as a man in
a gun tight, and 1 am always ready."
—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Snake Killing Kitten
neorgo Fornwald, substitute mail
carrier, Dloomsburg, owns a cat which,
strange to say, will not catch a mouse,
but spends Its time in thc yards hunt-
ing for garter snakes.
The eat so far this season has
caught three nakes and brought thorn
to the house, and afler laying a snake
down on the porch it goes back again
in the yard to hunt for more. Two of
the snakes the cat lias caught wire
captured in one day, while the other
was caught a day later Theae three
aro the only ones Mr Kornwald has
seen, yet some of tho neighbors say
they often see the eat with a snake
iu Its mouth.
Whether or not the animal would
"Last, \.'ir, nflcr having my litUel
1 treated a very prominent phy-f
' ' 'an f< an obstinnte case of eczema,!
' tod lo tho Cuticura Ilomedies.f
and was so well plcasi d with tho al-l
tantaneous relief afforded thatl
* discarded the physician's prescrlp-l
tion and relied entirely on the Cutl-I
ap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cu-[
Pills. When wo commenced!
with the Cuticura Remedies her feetl
and limbs were covered with running!
sores, iu about sl\ weeks we had herl
completely well, and there has bcenl
no recurrence of the trouble.
"In July of this vear a little bey InI
our family poisoned his haiiu« and[
arms w ith poison oak, and in twent*-1
four hours his hands and arms vere a|
mass of torturing sores. V'd used
only the Cuticura Remedies, mid In
about three weeks his hands and arms
healed up. Mrs. Lizzie Vincent Thomas,
Fairmont, Walden's Itidgo Tenn., Oct
13. 1905."
Why He Was Jolly.
ltlddor met Kidder, and Kidder was
Just bubbling with good humor.
"What are you feeling so uncom-
mon jolly over?" said Didder.
"Why. tny host girl went «nd got
married yesterday," said Kidder, slap-
ping Bidder on the back.
"Seems to me that's about tho last
thing for a chap to feel jolly over,"
r.aid Bidder.
"What!" said Kidder. "It was me
she went and got married to!"
And so the cigars were on Bidder.—
Browning's Magazine.
Sheer wtilto goods, In Tact, any nn*
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to tho way they
are laundered, tills being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beau-
ty. Home laundering would be equal-
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will bo pleasantly surprised at th«
improved appearance of your work.
Pointed Conversation.
"Jack, 1 am going away."
"Going away, Madge?"
"Yen, going away. But before 1 go
I have something to say to you."
"Something to say to me, little
wife?"
"Yes, something to say to you. Don't
send me any poker stories In lieu of
the weekly remittance. That'll be
about all."
Beware of Ointments for Catarrb
that Contain Mercury,
as mercury will mreljr destroy tho en-c of finell
nitl '"iiij ouly derange tho whole nyetem when
etiHTliitf it through tlie mucoua «urfaciM. Such
ariliM H bIimuIi] in.*vor ho used except on prencrlp-
tt 'ii* • r 'iu i"putahlo phyilelaue, a-« thc damage th«y
will dpli ten iu;il to the good you can poaeibly de-
rlvo frujn them. II i'i'§ Catarrh i uro. manufactured
by K..I < licoey & < • , '1 tvlo, o , cutitaiat no mer-
cury. and It taken internally, aitluK directly upon
•he and imucuuh burfuce.s uf the Hyotem. In
buying Hall h Catarrh Cure he «ure yuu jfet tti«
Kenuln** It I* taken Internally ind made in Toledo^
Ohl >.' y I* .! i heney A Co, iVnilinonials tree.
Bold bf Drnnriata* Price 9Be* per bottlt*
'la^e llaii'a Family >'Ula tor con*tlpatlja.
the stilling of the tempest on tho Soa tackle anything larger than a garter
of Galilei', and how Christ walked on snake is hard to tell, yet from the
tho waves. In the afternoon her moth fight it puts up when It gets hold of
er missed her and began an anxious one of these smaller species It Is evi-
search of the house. As she neared dent that it would probably be able
tho bathroom she hoard sounds ol to get away with a larger one. Tho
splashing, and hurried to the door tc snak--killing cut is not very large and
behold a small, excitt I face peering Is still nothing more than a kitten.—
over the rim of the big white tub, and Willlamsport tiazotte.
to hear a small, excited voice ex
claim: "Kay, mamma, this walking
on the water is quite a trick."
Successful Voyage of Australian'* Ark.
Australia has giver, to humanity an
Would Make Rich Crop. interesting N'eah In the person of Ke-
lt Is estimated that 21,000,000 acres j llx Tanm'r. wll<> some time ago left
on 'no statehood."—Perkins Press.
In his speech at Oklahoma City Sat-
urday, August 21th, Secretary Taft
said:
"If I wore a citizen of Oklahoma I
would certainly vote f r the rejection
of thc constitution, because I bdllove
that it would be a great deal easier
to reject the constitution than to
amend Its defects, and 1 would ba con-
fident as a citizen that the next con-
gress would conic to tho aid of the
people of Oklahoma by a new enauilng
act and a now c nventlon."
will be pleased to boar out the state
ment that this has been the claim of
this paper at all times since the un-
canny document was placed before an
outraged public."—State Capital.
th"in, or any member ot rfio party,
urge the election of a republican legis-
lature lor the purpose of amending a
document which they nil agroe is
much easier to reject than it Is to
amend Its defects.
If the State Capital Is sincere In Its
Of cou'rst Taft and the State Cap-
ital agreedL.perfectly on the republican
policy of defeating tho constitution | p sltlon we' shniroxpecf''a 'to stand
because "It would be n great d-al | pat for the de'eat of Ihe constitution
easier to reject the constltutl n than and lot the legislature go to the d-l
to iim?nd Its defects, as Mr. Taft re for oven an Oklahoma newspaper that
maiked. If that Is the honest purpos furnished political pabulum to Taft Is
lo, the Capital and Mr. Taft as well entitled to tako tho v" oud „f n
The friends of tha State Capital | as ot their party, why should cither of j when It gets an opportunity
are available for rlee growing in
Louisiana and Texas, and the value
of such crop would he $400,000,000.
This would make the rice crop fifth
In point of value among the cereals of
tills country.
Burglar's Pathctic Wall.
A burglar arrested in London the
other night remarked regretfully: "I
Australia for New Zealand with
scheme for the construction of an urk
which should carry a considerable
number of passengers.
In Maoriiand he persuaded quite a
number of people to believe in his
ideas, and some weeks ago "Tanner's
Vrk," a barrel shaped structure of
piite unique design was built and the
■essel put to sea from a small port
Been Laid Away in Stockings.
The Framlngham (Man.) national
bank has just received for redemption
a note on tho old Framlngham bank,
which was the predecessor of the pres.
ent national bank. The note <s dated
June 1", 1854, and is as crisp and
clean as the day that, it left the en.
graver's hands. Tho note will be
kept as a souvenir.
"It Knocks the Itch."
It may not cure all your ills, but it
does cure ouo of tha worst. It cures
any form of iteh ever known—no mat-
ter what it called, where the sen-
sation is "itch," it knocks it. Eczema.
Ringworm and all the rest are reliev-
ed at once and cured by one box. It's
guaranteed, and Its name is Hunt's
Cure.
You must love your work and not
be always looking over the edge of It
wanting your play to bigin.—George
Klfot.
know the time when 1 could do 20 j near Christ church. Tanner was on
houses In two hoius. Hut I am get-
ting old."
,i , ; . Granite as Fertilizer.
The government bifentt of Plant
industry finds that ground granite
makes excellent fertilizer.
- lie- most lives who things most,
feels the noblest, acts tho best
hoard with five companions.
The ark was bound for Tlmarti, a
r.iaeo about a hundred miles away,
uid, granting fair weather, Tlmaru
should have been made In Hires d v*
Nine people out of ton laughftd at the
"terprlse, but the ark arrived safe-
l at Its destination
Guarai*
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Hunter, T. W. The Hartshorne Sun. (Hartshorne, Indian Terr.), Vol. 13, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1907, newspaper, September 5, 1907; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc151257/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.