Beaver County Republican. (Gray, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1912 Page: 4 of 4
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Beaver County Republican
BY
HARVEY W. Wt«L,
The Gray Barber
ft
PUBUSHRD BV
Subscription 1,1
p^toay.
Entered as !-*ln« tnil
mitt?r F'H. 21, W12
oftae at Grav. 0'<1« . ualar the
Act of March 3, 1879.
For President of the United St it™,
William Howard Taft.
For Vice-President of the United States
James Schoolcraft Sherman.
For Member Congress
J hereby announce myself an a candi-
Wnte for re-nomim lion for Congress in
the Seoni District, subject to the
decision of tV> Repunlican primary. I
am d"*"ol7 T it A?ul for the high hon-
ors thf R "ouhlicana have heretofore
Conferred Upon me end I will highly
fcpprecirtli th«sir continued support.
Dick T. Morgan.
County Treesurer.
i hereby announc my candidacy for
county treasure of Beaver county
subject to the decision of the Repblican
Voters at the AUgust primaries.
E. L. PicKel
Register of Deeds.
I hereby announce myself a candidate
/or renomination for the office of Rog
istor of Deals of Beaver county. huu-
j"ct to the decision of the .Republican
Iparty, H. M. flu ick.
County Treasurer,
I hereby announce myself a candi-
date for the Republican nomination for
County Treasurer at the August pri-
maries.
Ishmael W. M .ore.
County Treasurer.
I hereby announce myself a candi-
didate for the nomination i\>r county
Treasurer, subject to th& decision ol'
the Republican party.
U. W. Kent.
— ....: vmr
SHOULD BE TAKEN SERIOUSLV Notice for Publication.
Department of the Interior. _ _
Chi!dl h Mln*. Groping in Darkneu, u. Land Office at Woodward, Okia. j J. i. LlLfc., rfOp.
Is Craving for Information That June 30. 1912.
la Denied It. Koti>«* l.v given that Ora Mays 1 Open every day DUV oUnaay
'i'and on Saturday two chairs re
Bonhears Bros. Golden Mascot of these lands the proceeds
r * T P)tiy Show dwe into'should not be diverted from the
(j_«iy early Su'iliV afernoon and ogiginal purpose—the education
at once stretched their livinpr1 arid civilization of the I-dians.
tents. This gave our peoDle: Congress accepted Mr. Morgan's tPMe ^i#fnl lnformatlon made ii. E No. 35407—serial 014566for a™ u ^u'T'
plenty of time before the show ' view and a.s a result the Indians 1h carefully concealed from the very T>-2fN t R,Smfireflni5
commenced to become personally have to their credit $320,000.00 j young child a rattle, or at most a t^e year proof" uT establish claim To Half-Sole Shoes
acquainted with the managers ' drawing 3 per cent interest not ™bb«r d° . J'■ '« °niy plaything As t0 the- ian(j above described before rp.
j .« • . . . . a small item for a TnnarP0aman i *r°WS *f Tery a,owly and °- F- Pruett, clerk of the district court and make all Other necessary re-
and their corps of clever assist-1a 8mau ,iem Ior a uongre«aman j gradually introduced to the various in his office at Beaver. Oklahoma, p,,^ on phoes and harness.
forms of the animal kingdom. Of the on the 6th day of Aup . 1912. ■
J. W. CAYLER,
Auctioneer,
flalko, - - Oklahoma,
Will go any place and time to1
>
to secure for his district,
Holiness Camp Meeting.
The fifth Annual Holiness camp meet-
ing of the Blue Mound Association will
be held from June 20 to Augu.4t4, 1912,
at J. M. Zook's place t miles west of
LaKemp, 9 miles southeast of Plainview
and 7 milt s eaat of Gray.
Theme Holiness unto the Lord and
a four fold goaoel viz: Justification of
sinners santilicaticn of believers, Divine
healing and th« second coming of the
Lord. Evangelist J. c. Robertson and
wife of Rosewell N. M. will have charge.
Other preachers and workers will be
present. Missionary fields will be
represented by Rev. L. B. Worcester, of
Tabor Iowa.
We will be prepared to Serve meals,
choice show to which the most I Individual meals tickets 20 cents per
ants and all found them gentle-
manly quite men of businej*.
The sho ' took place Monday
right and was attended by a
good sized <*rowd of p:op!e who
were well pleased with the en-
tertainment. Their ponies are
well trained, the moving picures
clean and instuctive and every
feat ire of the attending program
is clean and refined and no skin
game or graft that usually follow
a show is allowed by the manager
To the mind of this editor it is a
Kor Sheriff
To the good people of B aV-T county
1 announce that I am a cii.il tite foi
the nomination for phsnif mi ject to
the decision of the Ket>ubli ;«n ii^rty at
the August primary. 1, N. I'li-lpn
For county Superintendent.
I tak ■ this method of announcing ,tc
the (food people of Botv.;. county, Ok la..
, that lama candia it-; for the njniinatioij
t<4 ovunty Superintendent, subject t6
the decision of li e Republican party.
H. C. Fellow
Fqr Representative,
J 1 hereby announce my candidacy lor
* Representative of Beaver and Harper
ivountiod subject to the will of the Re-
publican votes
Th08. P. Braidwood.
Beaver Ckla.
, The bootleggers will now be
caught and prosecuted by Uncle
,Sam and the taxpayers of Okla-
homa will not hav^e to stand the
bills caused by these prosjeut-
ions, The federal court decisioA
> in this case wii] s lye U^laho.na
, thotjsanJs c£ dollars ir court;
I costs, and will Lr.ng genuine
prohibition, for uncle Sam w!ll
j prosecute all offenders alike and
i pay no regards to costs.-~Skia*
took Sentinel.
f A* few weeks age down in low-
i er Cklaho r a two men. sleek-
■ tongued And well drassed, enter
ed a grocery tore. Unft \leore a
plug hat. t\ll "this hat with
molasses," v«aid one of the
strangers. The grocer hesitated,
but finally complied w ith tha
request. AfW?r doing so the
refined and Chri tianized citizen
need have no hesitancy in
attending. James R. Bonh^ur,
the head manager informed us
that he would probably make
another trip through here in
October or November and that
at that time he would have a
new picture machine new lijhl
plant, new engine and manY new
attractive features.
A good many harvest hands are
passing through town th se nays
going farther ea«t to work* giving
a3 an eXcu?e that they can get
more wages than is being ofihred
here. So far as we know no wage
scale his bean ad)ptei bv the
farmers here, and we are quit,
sure that they wiU pay as much
as the farmers will pay anywhere
else in the state. The men who
have no wheat should fct' v here
and help care for the harvest
bf their neighbors. Aside from
che q jest on of wages they owe it
to their ho.ne people at this time.
9tay here and help—you may
need it yourself next year.
• - - The question as to why
the Democratic national convent-
ion has a delegate strength of
1,09^ and the Republican con-
vention only 1,078 has arisen
several times on the street. The
jifferencc arises from the fact
that the Democrats admit six
delegate eaeh from Alaska,
Distr' :t of doiumbia Philippine
Island and Forto Rico, wl ereas
the F. jppbii jarta admitted only
two from each: Botft parties
admit .s^x froth & Liberal
DertiOenu. (
Washington. D. 0. June 24,
1912, During the week congres-
sman Morgan has been entertain-
ing a band of His ccnstftuent8-
repre&enJting the Cheyenne pnd
Arapaho I ndians. The delation
consists of the three principal
chiefs of the tribe-Chipf, Old
Crow, Chief Three-Pingerc and
Cloud Chief, nono of whom can
speak .Engu. h. They yierc ac-
companied bY two of the most
progresed and best educated
members of the tribe, Phillip
meal family meal tickets $12.50.
Parties desiring to board themselves
may come prepared to do so.
If you desire to rent a tent place
your order by July 1st, tents 10X12 $3.
tents 12X14 $3,60.
Plenty of pasture and Water for stock.
For further infbrmation address.
Ira j. Turman, Sec'y or J. M. Zook,
Pastor.
mysteries of numbers and of lan-
guages it has as yet no conception.
Its constant questions are for the
most part answered "humorously"
and hence Incorrectly, or they are not
answered at all. This eternal "hu-
mor" is most galling of all. Why
should a human Infant be such an Ir-
resistible joke?
Claimant names as witnesses:
H. E. Slater, Prence W, Hollar.!,
Henry P, Kliewer, Adam R. Slater, all
of Balko, Okla.
Geo. D. Orner.
First puBlished July 6, 1912,
T
-I can handle all farm loans attend genial farm sales your
The lower animals j in Beaver County, and esoe?ially businessi respecuyso 1C1
take their jjung seriously and train |n the neighborhood of Gray, ^anteed. Ad~
them from the start with a very defl i .. J
Harvey Cox.
Hooker Okla.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
dress of phone me at my expense.
TOUCHED HUGO'S KIND HEART
Great Frenchman Aided Beggar With
Vehse of Much More Worth
Than Money.
A Frenchman, writing recently upo*
'The Mendicants of Paris," recalls a
pretty anecdote of Victor Hugo and a
blind beggar. The beggar was an old
tooldler, very feeble and quite sight-
less, who was led every day by his
little granddaughter to a certain
street corner, where be Waltted pa-
tiently for such scanty alma as the
hurrying public might drop Into a
•mall box that hung rrom his neck.
One day a group of gentlemen bait-
ed near him, chatting, and he heard
the name by which they called tb#
one who lingered longest. Keacblng
Torward as he, too, was about to go,
he caught him by the coat.
• What do you want, my good man?"
asked the gentleman. "I have already
given you two sous."
"Yes, monsieur, and I have thanked
jrou," replied the veteran. "It 1b some-
thing else that I want"
"What it it?"
"Verses."
"You shall hare thetn," said th« gen-
tleman; and he kept his word The
hext day the blind soldier bore on his
breast a placard with a stanza to
which was appended the name of Vic-
tor Hugo; and the arms in the bo£
were quintupled. The linet may be
thus translated:
Like Bellsarlue .find like Homer blind. ,
Led by a young child on his pathway
dim.
The hand that aids his need, pltyihg and
kind, ^
Me will not see, but God will see ft*
hlnl.
—Youth's Companion
nlte purpose in view. Yet their pos-
sibilities are infinitesimal as com-
pared with those of the average baby.
And we sit calmly by and enjoy the
"humor" of childhood and Insist that
the child Is enjoying Itself also, even
though Its little soul may be thirsting
for information which Is laughingly
denied It. And we continue to put
ofT the Inevitable day when the child
will have to take life seriously and
hence, according to our tradition,
sadly.
One Important point which is quite
overlooked by the upholders of the
bralnlpss child Is the fact that non-
sense and silliness are Just as taxing
to the infant mind as useful Informa-
tion would be. It requires no more
mental'effort to realize that A is A
than to grasp the extraordinary fact
that a mass of brownish softness 1«
a "fuzzy ittle Teddy bear, yes it is."
In fact, the letter A has a distinct ad-
, vantage. And at a more advanced
age it is cerlainly less puzzling to be
told that five and five make ten than
I to have one's own respectable pink
toes described as a series of pigs go*
ing to market or entering Into the va-
j rious other activities of life.—Sig
mund Spaeth in Harper's Weekly;
TURNED LEAVES OF ROMANCE
Vangy Found, as Others of Her Sex
Have Done, That Man Was
Ever Fickle.
**W111 you have a cup of tea. Van*
gy?" asked Mrs. Greene, as Vangy
came In from hanging out the clothes
"Ah don' 6ayah ef Ah dp, M!|
Greene. It right col' on de roof an'
Ah's mos' chill to de marrer ob mah
bones. Yo's bery kin'" as, yielding
to Mrs. Greene's suggestion, she de-
posited her portly form on a chatt*
near the kitchen table, "Yo's alius
tryin' to make a pusson comf'able.
Yo" mln's me ob mah maw—o' cos*
yo' aln' as ol' as her, but yo' like her
In yo' mannahs. Oh, yes'm, Ah likeil
—Make your final proof be-
fore and transact ail your U. S
Land Office work with
U. S. Commissioner,
SAMUEL ECKER,
Guymon, - - - Oklahoma,
A Rare Chance.
I want to trade for hofsOs a
?ood Quarter section cf land.
Has pome improvements and is
close to railroad. Write to
Cash Waters,
Liberal, Kfin.
Dr, J. H. Gum,
Veternary and Dentist.
Answer all calls day or night,.
Examinations free at
THE O. K. BARN,
Gray, * - OKLA. *
G. W. TAYLOR,
Justice of the Peace, District.
No. 6, Beaver Co.
will hold court at Plainview 01H
the 4th Saturday of each month*
and also at my residence oh sec,
32, township 1, rang e 20 at alf■
\ times.
grocer hand ad the h'$t to the
stranger who remarked "h^t the I Cpck and Ce fores Antelope
mo'asses had a bad odcr am1 ask- whj were bo h educated at Hask-
ed the tfrocer to .snipM it. Whenjol Institute, in Kansis. The In-
he attempted to do cot Ujstring : digns had a numb -r cf important
er clapped the hat ^h the ^ro^er'n matters tc present to the vjovern-
head and while h was endeavor- i ment. Several conferences were
inj? to get themolass s out of hla j had with Commissioner Valent-
eyesandoff his 'dee the str.-.ng: vs -ae of the indian Con-
calmly robbed the s!orc. Tt was ^rpssrran Morgan took them to
an orignal trick and \yorked to r^r White fiouse and introduced
NOT ON SECURE FOUNDATION
Engineer Explains Why Som Build*
Ing. Shake Whert Particularly
Heavy Wagon Goes By.
"What makes 4 building shake rf
it had the agile *very time a truck
with a twfcaty-ton girder rumbles br? kflneuh > ' tea fo'?' Ah, say. 'Wy,'
at* nngliwer wae asked. • thf--My, ye' .njaw fo'got {o put jV de-
"Only the buildings whose founda lgUgah an* ; Cayn drtnX tea 'lesfc
tlons do not go down to bed rock j bery sweet.' Now days." she
The Ow Drug Store
Has just received a complete line of
Reach Base Ball Goods,
Louisville Slugger Bats..
I have a complete new and up-to-date line of
Ladies' White Goods,
Silks and Ribbons,.
Ladies' Oxford Shoes and Hose,,
Trimmed Hats,
Calicos and Girghams.
in yo' mannahs. Oh, yes'm, Ah likei ™ m • *- •, , OJ * n. T3
;r.« rvr,,k«yr^ ss Men sPants, Fine Shirts,Loilars,
Neckties, Underwear,
Hose and Oxford Shoes.
Men and boys Working Cloih.es;
a Specialty.
Call and see rfxy stock before Buying.
Highest market price paid for PiSsduce.
body
tea Ah t'ink ob a gamman fr'en' Ah
Was 'gaged to oneet. 'Ware he now?
Lor, Ah dunno, he lef' de city.
ain' no 'count ho how an' Ah don'
cayah ef he nevah come back. Dere'i
Jes' as good moat in de hash as ebei*
come out ob it, Mis Greene. 'W'ot's
his name?1 honey. His name Mlstah
Dobeon, at dat time He Vise come
'roun to mail house to take his af'er*
noon tea wlf rrte hn' ma\V\ He mighty
sweet on in© den. Ah 'member one
day he come an' maw, she pO'd out ^
cup o' tea fo* him an' ho taste it an'
deft he say mos' 'grayshatln' like,
'Mis Vangy. would yo' mlji' puttin* yo'
ll'les flngah ti) taah tea—,on'y de \e'f
tip ob U? 'W'dt yo' wan me put raafc
ohako," he replied. "The occupants
of the building that r^s't* on rock
never know when a heavy load passes
it The man In the building whose
foundations go down Just a few feet
below the cellar floor, and stoji In
tha subsoil, often imagines he is
'the renter bf an earthquake.
"When the wagon bearing the beam
goes traveling along it bufnps over
ft
con-
cluded with a shake cf her head* "he
wouldn't drink his tea, Ah reckon, el
Ah was to put mah whole h*n' il\."
•T-iO
rine
GEO. E. RAGSDALE.
Bomb's Deadly Work.
Paris Is truly a city rif tragedlei.
▲t a quarter past eight the other
morning there wua a terrific bomb ex-
plosion on the Place de Montrouge.
the"lneq"uaTlUei oMhe itreVt"wfth"trV Policemen rushed hp, ^ found s
mendou. force, and this imparts wave young man of
motions to the soil, Whtch In turn .hrielOng with pain and filing in
vibrations to the old M«ny on th* ground. HU ^ and
ahrt hands were chvered with blood ana
MA'KK riNAt
MAS P.
R"E:rORE
D73
Commissioner.
transfer the
style foundation^, which sway
shake and tr«mblo. The foundations <n .
u . i.u. ™.t nr. not nien put the flro out, pu^ Hervo in a
whose pie* rest dn hed rock^are not thevhoar,8t hop.
affected. A twenty-ton beam a. tt ■ ^ f poHcen^n found lh,
slips from one paving stone to an P hotn made of tv,ft mfttui
other, impart, a force U> goap boxcs tled together, aud mlod
with pow'di-r nnd nails. Hervo declared
that he knew nothing about the bomb.
He was on his way to hi? work, saw
the thing lying on the pavement, and
kicked it off into the. gntttr. It brok*
his clothes were burning. Two police-
perfectidn. There are some Ca i- ^hem to the President, which the of motion proceeds in constantly
didates wdrklng the pljg hat deal Indians seemed to en-oy Kreatly.
on the people of Texas county, | fnere are about three thousand
hat may be likened
bombardment, but bec^u the wave
Widening circle*, and hence In con
stantly diminishing force distributed
all over th© foundation, r.o harm re-
U.S.
Have Your Abstracting Done by
Braidwood &,Son,
Beaver
i
—I ha^v a ChtACe lann "within
N<ifTce for Publicalion.
t.vo ■ iles of Gray for sale at a u;a.
bargain. If You are lookir.s: for a May 22, 1912.
o-nnd hnrrip lint nvpr :>ok >hir 1 is hereby Riven that Charles U
gooa noine a.nc o\er.joK .nu A1.0f Uangc, oklahoma, who
opportunity, , Jir. 11, 1906, made H. ti No. 35189-
R. W HuL 014443 for the southeast qliartor ol
—r™—rr.* scc-T-1 north of K- lv E-c- M-
L. L. G VGER, has fik-.l notice of hitention to make final
and these candidates have all at 10f the Cheyenne and Arapahos suits, if the force we -e aH^drlven at °Pue°',®nlt ,u a ma®ch and
once becomc graciously good, located In Morgan's district. ~
though their cohduct in our r.iidst TheV have come to regard Mr.
was for vears contemptuously J Morgan a" their friend and be-
vile. If the multitude of pro- fore they left Washington in-
mises made by such men art ^istea on having a picture taken
accepted in good fa^h by the with Congressman Morgan in the
taxpayers then the citizehsHp of r .nter of the group. The Indians'
the county V-'ill be apt to find it- are especially grateful to Mr.
self after the election, much i<i vlu^gan for securing for them
the s*me condition as the merch* the inoceeds of the sale of tha
ant above described.--Guymon old Darlington Indian School
Herald.
one point the effect would be like
that of a projectile from a baltlo-
ship."
bent down to find out.
followed.
An exploBloo
Meant Their Work to Last.
fashions Long Kept Up.
I The British admiralty's annual or
J der for black silk Anndkerchkffi for
the navy, recently placed for 90,000,
' ^ - n| f ( t t live yepr proof to establish claim tc
General Blacksmithmg
Am prepared to do all ciassts and for the western district of Okla.,
[of work reiuired in a fanning jnly^SiS"'' 'on 18th dsyl)'
|C0mmunity. Priccs right ana claimant names as witnesses:
i satisfaction guaranteed,
1 3-1-29D GRAY, OKLA.
Some of the early atonee of Welsh to Inquiry:, "why hlack?" It le
ilk e in New England burial ground* *,(<1 to be a<« tnournlng for N'elson'e
show very fine carving, evidently th* death nt trofaipar. Another instance
product of Kntftsh rather, than of long-continued mourning shown
Colonial workmen. The enduring in the dark "(Vttidi flfflclaliy worn by
Notice for Publipnticn,
Department of the Interior,
U. S. Land office at Woodward, Okla.
Jwn- 7, 1912.
Notice is herebsyriven that Williifr T.
James, of Caple, Okla., who on Dec.
23, 1905, made H. E number 28493
"h. McCoy. H KcCoy, L. Ewing, W.
T. Stewart, all of Range, Okla.
Geo. D. Orner. Register.
1st published Mev SI. 1912.
for "Publication.
DepaVtrhtnt of the Interior.
U. B. Lfcnd Office ait Woodward, okla.
May 22, 1912.
Notice is hereby given that Milton P.
quality of these taemdrtals •• evident the A^glo-Saxon race; at the deceas* -011179 fer'thesw qr sec. 2«, towps-hip j James, of Range, Okla., whoonOctoBer
on R comparison Wtween thefn and 0f tho duke of GiohCester, Queen ;1 north of rang*-' iy K. C. M. has tiled l*P, 1905, made H. E. No. 27151-010501
, lands under a bill introducd and otbfr stonofc put up a€ a much later AnrtVfc heir-apparent, the bar wept notice of intention to make final «ve for sftuttiw^stquarter sec, 25, township
oassed bv Mr, Morgan Tender date In <&« of the. old yards at into Vburnini and has never dol«0 >abSre^ A.Sifhld of. ranK° C- M. has filed
JESS "it Indiana
Farm Loans.
Lowest ratee, liberal terrnr ar.4 j treaty Ol 1W1 ummus tnid^ighte^nth century dHtes are dynasty on the British throne was
money ih from one to teh days had released their title to thwse badly scaled apd pavtiaily iHegibie, scarcely to be regretted, rimtbtlesi
after the papers pre signed, lands, But as the hnds had been whilo the oldest atone tU yard
Sand^vT8 and W° wi" fur h#o1: XT
come anu set yui. : purposes to educate the Indians are equally plain; practicely un
First building east of court'Mr. MorganinaiaMd that when (.<•« ^3*5^, "T
hou«el Heaver Okls. I the Gcvp;nment came to dispose,
the largest following Of one fashion
by in n was after Alexander let the
style of hhvlng the fice clean
the w« er* district 6f Okla., at (iu.v- the landabove described before Samuel
mon, Okla., on the *2nd rlBy of Jt |y E"ker, U. S. Commissioner, at his of
ltt18, fie® in Guymon, Oklshoma, on the 6th
Claimant names as witnesses:
Claude Moore, T. Reed, John
C,
shaven; this was kept up by the Phelps, all of Grand Val
Qraeco-Roman world for ffve hundred | ^ p Qrner
Firat onblinhod Jnne ?1, tyi*
I ypnr*
day of July, 1912.
Claimant names as witneefles:
George Fritf, H. Khorb, J. P. Tay
j lor, E. B. Mitchell; all of Range, Okla
Geo. D. Orner, ROgfoter
1st M'h. Mny 31. HU'.'
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Beaver County Republican. (Gray, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1912, newspaper, July 5, 1912; Gray, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc157993/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.