The Hartshorne Sun. (Hartshorne, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 10, 1916 Page: 3 of 6
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N<>) l< I Ol HI I I l\ III ' Ml
I MI 11 * 111 v I mini \
Nut ice i>> heirbv inii'ii Mini ill pin
o of mi ord nulr mn.lo im.l
entered in till' Ml (m l i oiii i m HM.I
(nr Pittsburg County, Oklahoma. n
mime No. '.'lii'l, wherein Sulnry Al
ill idge and R. H. Tanner are plain I ill
mill H. N. l« ' 1 defendant. ilir
under igned, J. L. 1...v.l< n. the dul>
appointed, qualified ami ailing n
reiver will offer for sale ami sell lo
(hi- highest bidder for cash on (he
.,(h day of September, 1 i> 1 ( . at "J :0(l
o'clock p. ni„ in front of the Star
Airdome and Theatre on the north
side of Pennsylvania Avenue, be-
tween Ninth and Tenth streets, in the
City of Hartshorne. Pittsburg Coun-
ty. Oklahoma, the following describ-
ed property, credits and effects, to-
wit:
l!78 opera chairs, 'J screens, fl
; toves, 2f>U folding chairs, 12 bench-
es, 1 power (i A. motion picture ma-
chine and 3 attachments, one electric
fan, 2 sets stage settings, electric
light globes and wiring, 1 piano, ,r>
gallon of linseed oil, 1 desk, any and
till rights or interest in leases of air-
dome and theatre owned by co-part-
nership composed of Sidney Ald-
i idge, R. R. Tanner and II. N. Fow-
ler, together with any and all other
property,* rights and effects of said
co-partnership.
That if said sale is not completed
on said date the same will be con-
tinued from day to day at the same
place and the same hour until com-
pleted.
Dated thi« the Mrd day of August.
lyili.
J. E. LA YDEN,
;V2-t."i. Receiver.
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION.
Slate of Oklahoma,
Pittsburg County.—.-s.
Before J. A. Johnson, Justice of
the Peace of Hartshorne Township.
F. M. Huffstutler, Plaintiff, vs.
James England, Defendant.
Said defendant, James England,
will take notice that he has been
sued in the above named court and
an attachment ha- been issued in said
action against his property, by F. M.
Huffstutler, for debt for rent in the
sum of thirty-seven and 20-100 dol-
lars, and that he must answer the
bill of particulars filed in said action
by the plaintiff on or before the
,'SOth day of August, 191(5, or said bill
of particulars will be taken as con-
fessed and judgment for said plain-
tiff for said sum and sustaining said
attachment. :U-t,'>.
.1. A. JOHNSON.
Justice of the Peace.
W. J. HULSEY, Atty. for Plaintiff.
A THOUGHT FOR THE
WEEK.
RnVfRNMrNT CROP RFPIW1
W , I ; , i . I > < , Ally '• \
I in ill , ,1 III, \ ||,t t|l|f f> I i ' | > i . | lo I I
i. 11 '.hi, uliUhoaix in..I fo.
il ■ ,1 mi 11, , us (*«MI>^tl"',l by Hi.
I I Clop 1 i irti at*" i Mini ti in
1111' i, I tin,mgb lb, Weal he.' bureau ).
C ,M lli'piillmellt of \|M 11-1111 111 I'
II. I olloV
Corn.
OKLAHOMA August I forecast,
7.">.000,000 bushels; production last
year (final estimate), 12:1,1)00,000
bushels.
I MTKIl STATES -August 1 forc-
cn.-t, 2.780,000,000 bushels; produc-
tion last year (final estimate), 3,-
or i,r.:i5,000 bushels.
All Wheat.
OKLAHOMA--August 1 forecast,
25.000,000 bushels; production last
year |final estimate), 30,540.000
iiushels.
UNITED STATES August 1 fore-
cast,,05 1,000,()t)0 bushels; production
last year (final estimate), 1,011,-
505,000 bushels.
Oati.
OKLAHOMA—August 1 forecast,
1 5,300.000 bushels; production last
year (final estimate), 37,800,000
bushels.
UNITED STATES—August 1 fore-
cast. 1,270,000,000 bushels; produc-
tion last year (final estimate), 1,-
540,3(12,000 bushels.
Potatoes.
OKLAHOMA—August 1 forecast,
2,1 10,000 bushels; production last
year (final estimate), 2,075,000
"bushels.
UNITED STATES—August 1 fore-
cast, 304,000,000 bushels; production
last year final estimate), 350,103,-
000 bushels.
Sweet Potatoes.
OKLAHOMA—August 1 forecast,
545.000 bushels; production last year
(final estimate), (590,000 bushels.
UNITED STATES—August 1 fore-
cast, 71,000,000 bushels; production
last year (final estimate), 74,295,000
bushels.
Hay.
OKLAHOMA —August 1 forecast,
580,000 tons; production last year
(final estimate), 1,058,000 tons.
UNITED STATES—August 1 fore-
A Group ol Tents In State Militia Camp
Nntlon,:il mianl*
picture shows n can
led with tents for tield service. This
nr gamu.
Pittsburg County Railway Co.
TIME TABLE NO. 12.
Whereas, Clod Almighty has given
to evei-y man one mouth to be fed
and one pair of hands adapted to fur-
nish food for that mouth, if anything
can lie proved to be the will of
Heaven it is proved by this fact that
that mouth is to be fed by those
hands, without being interfered with
by any other man who has also his
mouth to feed and his hands to labor
with. I hold, if the Almighty had
ever made a set of men that should
do all the eating and none of the
work, He would have made them with
mouths only and no hands and if He
had made another class, that He in-
tended should do all the work and
none of the eating, He would have
made them without mouths and with
all hands.—Abraham Lincoln.
Most disfiguring skin eruption,
scrofula, pimples, rashes, etc., are
due to impure blood. Burdock Blood
Hitters as a cleansing blood tonic, is
well recommended. $1.00 at all
stores. Adv.
Atropine or Eye Drops
The man who fits your eyes with drugs never gives you the
proper correction at the start, but he must make certain deduction
of his first findings; besides you cannot find two men who use the
drug route that use the same amount of drugs or the same amount
of deduction from his first correction. Now do you call this scien-
tific glass fitting? That is why you have to run into your specialist s
office for your glasses a half dozen times, as he that specialist
did not know whether your glasses are right or wrong.
Besides your inconveniences
The Use of Drugs in Your Eyes
is Dangerous, Really Dangerous
Dr. Landolth, a noted oculist of Paris, France, admits that
atropine has been known to cause death.
'Dr. George M. Gould, a celebrated eye specialist, says that, by
the use of atropine drops has developed a thousand times worse dis-
eases than he sought to cure. A noted scientist, Prof. Charles
Sheard of Ohio State University, asserts that the use of atropine
drops, for fitting glasses must be abandoned.
I have a method, coupled with many years of experience, which
does away with all danger, inconvenience and added expense
I have corrected thousands of eyes without the use of drugs,
and all are highly pleased with results obtained.
DR. I. LEVY
re fraction 1st and optician
Majestic Building Phone 934
Mcalester, okla
| In Effect Sunday, November 1, 1914,
, Superseding All Previous Time Cardi.
j Interurban cars leave Hartshorne
J daily as follows:
j Leave Arrive
I Hartshorne McAlester
j * 5:45 a. m (5:55 a. m.
* (5:56 a. m 8:00 a. m.
; * 8:05 a. m 9:13 a. m.
| 9:15 a. m 10:26 a. m.
i * 10:30 a. m 11:43 a. m.
| 11:15 a. m 12:56 p. m.
* 1:()() p. m 2:13 p. m.
J 2:15 p. m 3:26 p. m.
* 3:30 p. m 4:43 p. m.
! 4:45 p. m 5:56 p. m.
| * 6.00 p. m 7:13 p. m.
7:15 p. m 8:26 p. m.
* 8:30 p. m 9:43 p. m.
9:45 p. m 10:56 p. m.
*11:00 p. m 12:10 a. m.
Effective November 1, 1914, the
sale of regular one-way and round
I trip tickets will be discontinued.
I $5.00 Coupon Books will be sold
| at all ticket offices for $4.25.
I Ticket offices at Interurban Sta-
I tion, Tuell's Drug Store, Savage's
I Drug Store.
Cars marked * enter Haileyville
| after leaving Hartshorne. All other
j cars enter Haileyville before arriv-
I ing at Hartshorne.
cast. S 1,000,000 tons; production last
year (final estimate), 85,225,000
tons.
Pasture.
OKLAHOMA—August 1 condition
8(1, compared with the ten-year av-
erage of 77.
UNITED STATES—August 1 con-
dition 8(1.11, compared with the ten-
year average of 81,(5.
Apples.
OKLAHOMA August 1 forecast,
401,000 barrels; production last year,
(final estimate), 780,000 barrels.
UNITED STATES—August 1 fore-
cast, 71,(500,000 barrels; production
last year, (final estimate), 7(5,(570,-
00() barrels.
Peaches.
OKLAHOMA—August 1 forecast,
237,000 bushels; production last year,
(final estimate), 2,408,000 bushels.
UNITED STATES—August 1 fore-
cast, 40,300,000 bushels; production
last year, (final estimate), (53,4(50,-
000 bushels.
Cotton.
OKLAHOMA—July 25 forecast,
1,020,000 bales; production last
year (Census), (539,(52(5 bales.
UNITED STATES—July 25 fore-
cast, 12,900,000 bales; production
last year (Census), 11,191,820 bales.
Kafir Corn.
OKLAHOMA—August 1 condition
UNITED STATES—August 1 con-
dition 72.8, compared with the ten-
year average of 82.4.
Prices.
The first price given below is the
average on August 1 this year, and
the second the average on August 1
last year.
OKLAHOMA—Wheat, 105 and
103 cents per bushel. Corn, (59 and
77. Oats, 40 and 37. Potatoes, 87
and 5.9. Hay, $5.50 and $(5.50 per
ton. Cotton, 11.9 and 8.0 cents per
pound. Eggs, 15 and 12 cents per
dozen.
UNITED STATES—Wheat, 107.0
and 10(5.5 cents per bushel. Corn
79.4 and 78.9 cents. Oats, 40.3 and
15.4 cents. Potatoes, 95.4 and 56.3
cents. Hay, $10.70 and $11.02 per
ton. Cotton, 12.(5 and 8.1 cents per
pound. Eggs, 20.7 and 17.0 cents
per dozen.
the politeness and gallantry to wo-
man which she always has command-
ed. Equal suffrage has not lower-
ed the ideals of women."
McAlester
Military Medals fc.r Women.
Remember that knock-kneed, weas-
ened, two-by-four fellow who uesd
to expectorate lavishly, and say that
"women shouldn't vote because they
can't fight'.'" That women "orter be
pertected by men," etc., ad nauseuin
and blame foolishness? You've heard
this asinine ranting hundreds of
times if you are a suffragist. Last
time it was made in a southern leg-
islature by a specimen so physically
infiim that his very appearance as a
warrior was laughable, and his lack
of self-control made him ridiculous
as a protector. Now comes the news
from London that King George has
instituted an order conferring mili-
tary medals on women who have dis-
played conspicuous bravely and de-
votion under fire. Women under
fire are chiefly protecting men and
nobly they perform what is a duty
and woman's recognized honorable
part in human experience. With the
record of southern women still fresh
in many a southern veteran's heart,
disfranchisement of women is a vapid
insult to disparage the bravery of wo-
men under stress when all must rally
to the protection and the defense of
home and country. The man who
denies in times of peace, the right
that woman should have in the ballot
is usually the first to call on her for
duty when war menaces the land.
*HE old Egyptians
were famous bread
bakers of their time, but
their baking ability was
confined almost exclusive-
ly to bread. It is different
with us for we specialize in all the good things
a modern bakery produces.
Our Pies
are particularly appetizing and in such variety as
will suit any taste. Even if we do say it our-
selves, the best of home cooks can't beat them.
They are an ideal dessert to place on any table.
Quality and cleanliness are the twin mottoet
at this bakery at all times.
Powell Parham
Griceries a.nd Bakery
GET READY.
Now is the time that your hens
will moult or shed their feathers.
This process is rather slow and Na-
ture should be assisted. R. A.
Thomas' Poultry Remedy will help
your hens to moult causing them to
shed earlier and be ready to lay
when eggs are highest in the winter.
If this remedy does not make good,
we will. COLEMAN & MERRILL.
Women Loyal.
Another popular idea concerning
women has come to grief. A new
book written by a psycologist makes
the statement that women are far
more loyal to their employers than
are men. That women are better
confidants and will not disclose busi-
ness secrets. This is why they make
such valuable ecretaries. This very
trait of loyalty would make the wo-
men fine voters and safe custodians
of the ballot.
BIDS WANTED.
ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft
*
ft woman suffrage notes, ft
ft *
ftftftftftftft ft ftftftft
Housekeeping Voters.
The theory that suffrage for wo-
men will cause the housewife to drop
her dish-pan and mop and desert the
kitchen for the stump is a falacy, ac-
cording to Senator Shafroth, of
Colorado. That state has had equal
suffrage for twenty-three years and.
therefore, Senator Shafroth is recog-
nized in many quarters as an author-
ity on votes for women.
Divorces due to woman suffrage
in Colorado are as rare as orchards
in the Sahara, according to Senator
Shafroth. In a statement to The
Washingttyi Herald, he said:
"Woman suffrage has not caused
the neglect by women of their home
duties. It has not been the cause for
domestic dissension or divorces.
Judge Allen of the Colorado district,
declares, that in twenty years on the
bench, he has never known of a di-
vorce case wherein it was claimed
that political differences had been
the cause of trouble between hus-
band and wife.
"Equal suffrage in Colorado has
caused no tendency in men to omit
Hartshorne, Okla., Aug. 8, 1916.
The Board of Education of Harts-
horne, Okla., will receive bids to put
in water pipe to supply the Harts-
horne Separate School with City
water. The right to reject any or
all bids is hereby reserved.
For particulars see the Clerk of
the Hoard of Education.
BOARD OF EDUCATION,
By T. J. WEATHERALL, Clerk.
You can't please them. If you go
four days without a shave Friend
Wife will claim that you do it be-
cause you have no further use for
her and don't care how you look.
And if you shave every morning she
will claim that fou are interested in
some other woman and want to look
your best.
P. N. Cline of Graham county,
Texas, has a new method of killing
rats under his barn. He mixed gaso-
line with coal oil in the supply tank
of his auto, attached a rubber hose
to the exhaust and put one end into
the rat hole. The engine was started
and hundreds of rats died under the
barn. Many others ran out and died
as soon as they struck the freah air.
Cline gathered up four bushels of
dead rats.
The Stroog Withstand the Heat of
Summer Better Than the Weak
Old people who are feeble, and younger
people who are weak, will be strengthened
and enabled to go through the depress-
ing heat of sntntnrr bv taking regularly
Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic It purifies
and enriches the blood and builds up
the wbole system. 50c.
Seventeen women from eight states
and one from Smyrna, Turkey, were
graduated from the Women's Medical
College of Philadelphia.
i'll.it.i l y American Tress Association
State Troops Building Pontoon Bridges
Hejruiui unity tactles lire followed Iiy the national guard in liiilldlns pun
conn bridges This is it ti important feature of warfare, particularly with uu
invading arm) in h country such us Mexico
what an inch of rain is
worth.
Every inch of rainfall above four
inches in the Dakotas, California,
Washington, Kansas, and Nebraska in
May and June means an increase of
$15,000,000 in the value of the wheat
crop. Every inch of rainfall above
three inches in July in Indiana, Illi-
nois, Kansas, Iowa, Ohio and Nebras-
ka increases the value of corn by
$1(55,000,000.
st. louis heat kills five.
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 7.—Five persons
died from the heat in St. Louis Sun-
day. The maximum temperature was
93 degrees.
Subscribe for THE SUN.
What has become of the old-fash-
ioned mother who used to have to
wean her baby?
A man may admit that your wife is
smarter than his wife. But he knows
that his dog has it all over your dog.
Which President Said:
"To be prepared for war is
one of the moft effective
means of preserving peace?"
"No, you're wrong. It wasn't Roosevelt. It wasn't
Wilson, either. You're simply guessing, now."
Well, maybe you can name offhand the 12 states
in which women will be allowed to vote for President
this year? No? My, but you're getting rusty. Better
brush up your Historical knowledge right now by reading
'The Presidency of the United States'
This is a 48-page, vest pocket size manual, chock-
full of reliable, authentic facts, dates, incidents, statistics,
etc., about all past and present elections. It's the big-
gest little election argument settler you ever saw.
You can obtain a copy at this office at 10 cents each.
To possess information Is always desirable. Even a
fence should be "well-posted." You'll certainly need
this book during the coming election. Get your copy
today. Just fits the vest pocket.
The Hartshrne Sun
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Hunter, T. W. The Hartshorne Sun. (Hartshorne, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 10, 1916, newspaper, August 10, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc163134/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.