The Herald-Sentinel. (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1912 Page: 4 of 8
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Cordell Herald-Sentinel
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% •
CORDELL*
OKLAHOMA
OKLAHOMA NEWS NOTES
They art talking street lights at
Goltry.
hu struck t*o mora
COLONEL ROOSEVELT
NOIOUI Of DANGER
H.00D-P0I80NING PERIOD NOT
YET PASSED
Blackwell
gassers.
Wodward's school enrollment has
rsaohed 730.
Cotton receipts at Kingston have
exceeded 4,000 bales.
Several cities are to vote on pool
hall closing ordinances.
Ardmore is after another railroad
proposition toward Lawton.
Oil prospectors were never bo busy
In the state as Just at this time.
A second big strike of lead and
■(ho ore has ben made near Miami.
Pottawatomie county furnished 13
happy brldeB last week; lucky num-
ber.
There are more brooms made at
Lawton than at any other Oklahoma
point.
Sayre had four runaways one after-
noon; farmers left their teams tied
loose.
Pauls Valley has found a two foot
ooal vein but It Is 1790 feet on the
road to China.
Five cases are being prosecuted at
Muskogee for mixing ground corn
cobs with feed.
Cotton marketed at Caddo averag-
ed more than 100 bales per day dur-
ing all of last week.
Jewell Graham, 9-year-old girl, liv-
ing near Temple, picked 517 pounds
of cotton in one day.
The lucky arrival of a Rock Island
train at Texhoma saved the station
from destruction by Are.
, Thomas A. Hagler, a prominent
Tulsa oltlzen, died very suddeuly a
few days ago of heart failure.
Building erected In 1890 at Paw-
huska was removed recently to make
way for modern brick block.
Southeastern Oklahoma rt>ema to
be the rendezvous of the bandits from
■everal surrounding states.
Enid sent a freight thief to the pen
a few days ago where is wife Is al-
ready serving a long time sentence.
The Oklahoma cotton buyers are
determined that thl# crop is going to
be big enough to force the price down.
Pan! editor of the Krem
tfrnal has gone to Florida to
•pend the winter because of his
health.
Twenty cars of corn already have
been shipped from Webbers Falls. The
prevailing market price Is 45 cents
per bushel.
There Is nothing that will so dl-
reotly Influence the prloe of a farm as
the bad roads leading to and from It.
This is true of every part of Oklaho-
The Inaugural ceremonies of Pres-
ident S. D. Brooks of the Oklahoma
state University, will be held nt. Nor-
man, Oct. 21st. Many noted educators
will attend from all over the coun-
try.
Sulphur soon will vote on a sewer
bond issue of $17,500 in connection
with an appropraitlon of a like amount
by the United States government for j
the building of a sewer through the
Piatt National Park.
Cushing is to be Improved by the
construction of seven new cement
street crossings.
Rev. F. M. Alexander has just been
Installed pastor of the Norman Pres-
byterian church, Rev. Geo. Nichols ol
Outhrie, assisting.
Mrs. Giles Payne, wife of a member
of the pressman's union at Ardmore,
waB accidentally shot through the up-
per right, luug. the ba\l passing
through the body. She Is vin a pro-
oarlous condition.
Following a courtship of a week's
duration, Earl Chapman, 29. of Oma-
ha, Neb., and Miss Bertha Burnett,
23/ of Bridgeport. Okla., were united
In marriage at the Dresden hotel in
Oklahoma City by the Rev. R. A.
Chase, pastor of the First M. K.
ohurcli. Chapman, who is a travel-
ing aalesman, only met Miss Burnett
a week ago, while making a business
call upon her father, who is a mer-
chant in Bridgeport. It was a case
of "love at first sight," and Chapman
Immediately began the wooing or hlB
pretty bride and, not only wooed, but
won her, terminating in the marriage.
Secretary W. B. Moore, of the Ok-
PATIENT RESTING EASY
Longs For Freedom From Enforced
Confinement, But Jeste at Iron
Rule of Phyeiciane—Bullet
Has Been Located
BULLETIN.
Chicago.—The following bulletin on
Colonel Roosevelt was issued at 10:55
p. m. Thursday:
"Pulse 82.
"Temperature 9S.8.
"Respiration 20.
"Colonel Roosevelt Is resting quiet-
ly. He announces that he breathes
perceptibly easier. He Bays he feels
as well as could be expected.
Drs. Murphy. Devan
and Terrell."
Chicago.—Throughout Thursday Col-
onel Roosevelt lay in his bed In More)
hospital with virtually no variation of
hlB condition, It was a day of waiting,
with the ever present possibility of
complication, but with lessened fears
on the part of those who were watch-
ing over the wounded man. He seem-
ed in his almost normal condition, but
his physicians said ho was by no meaus
out of danger.
Colonel Roosevelt's physicians were
discussing the length of time it will
be necessary for the colonel to re-
main in the hospital.
It was believed that It might be safe
for him to leave for Oyster Hay on
Monday or Tuesday If all goes well,
but not even a tentative decision was
reached.
The clinical records were the moat
encouraging of any day since Colonel
Roosevelt entered the hospital. During
the morning the variation in tempera
ture was limited to two-tenths of a
degree and throughout the afternoon
It was reportod us normal. There vir
tually was no variation in pulBe. The
period of possible development of
blood polBonlng has another day to
run, and although the physicians said
a change might occur within an hour
at any time during the next day, they
were moro optimistic Thursday as to
the outcome than at any previous time.
Possibility of tetanus, always to De
reckoned with In the case of bullet
wounds, has still to be considered and
as the period in which this might de-
velop, the physicians said, is six or
seven days, Colonel Roosevelt will not
be regarded as entirely out of danger
even should the next day pnss with no
BlgnB of blood poisoning. Scurry L.
Terrell said the colonel could not leave
the hospital safely until the expiration
of this period, and for the reason it
was regarded as out of the question
to consider the colonel's departure for
Oyster Bay before early next week.
All of Thursday Mrs. Roosevelt was
at the bedside and although her hus-
band Jestingly complained he was the
victim of machine rule, she said he
mUBt see no one with the exception of
his family. Theodore Jr., Ethel and
Mrs. Nicholas Longworth talked with
their father from time to time but
these family chats were limited to a
few minutes on each occasion. Twice
during the day, however, Mrs. Roose-
velt made exceptions to her rule. Miss
Jane Addams of Hull House, one of the
most active workers for the progres-
Bive party, called late in the afternoon
and spent ten minutes with Colonel
Roosevelt. She had hardly departed
when two babies, twins, who were
spending the first day of their lives In
the hospital, were brought in. As
there was no possibility for conversa-
tion between Colonel Roosevelt and
the twins, Mrs. Roosevelt admitted
them for a moment.
BREAKING INTO THE PINK SHEET
UAOt
Wiifi h
(Copyrigbtl
SENATOR HEYBURN
DMDDENLY
DEATH BECKONS UPPER HOUSE
MEMBER FROM IDAHO
BOSTON RED SOX
WIN CHAMPIONSHIP
Defeat New York Giants In Eighth
Contest of World's Cham-
pionship Sereis
• •
• ALL RECORDS BROKEN •
Washington.—United States Senator # ' «
Weldon Brinton Heyburn of Idaho died 9 The total pal(1 attendance for •
at his apartments here after a linger- # the gorie8 of elght garaes ot the •
Ing illness. He was 60 years old and # baseball championship was 257, •
had been In the senate nine years. ^ %
A complication of diseases involving # The totai receipts were $490,- •
the heart and kidneys caused the ^ gjg
senator's death. He had not been well # Each club.s ghare waa $147,-
slnce last March, when ho callapsed ^ 028.85.
after delivering a speech in the senate # T'h'e National commission's •
on the arbitration treaties, in spite of # ghnre wa8 ^9io83.30. •
doctors' warnings that the effort might # The total piayer8' share, derlv- •
coBt him his life. Several weeks ago,, # ed (rom the firBt four games •
apparently gaining strength after a # only wag $147,471.69. •
Berlous relapse, the senator and Mrs. # 0f' thi8 amount the Boston play- •
• ers, as winners, shaned 60 per •
• cent, or $88,543.01.
9 The New York players, as los-.
J erB shared $59,028.69. •
Each Red Sox player, of whom •
9 twenty-two were eligible, received •
© $4,024.68. •
• Each Giant player, of whom •
• twenty-three were eligible, re- •
O cetved $2,566.46. ®
• These figures in every case are •
9 greater than those for any pre- •
A vious world's series. •
O •
••••••••••••••
BoBton.—The Boston Red Sox, pen-
nant winners of the American league,
are the world's champions of 1912.
Defeating the New York Nationals
Wednesday by a score of 3 to 2 in ten
innings of a bitterly fought struggle,
they captured their fourth victory of
the world's series and carried oft the
premier honors in baseball.
Heyburn made preparations for an- The Giants won three games of the
other trip west. Another relapse fol- series that was played before more
lowed, however, and Btnce then the than 250,000 people and one contest
was a tie. The total receipts for the
WELDON B. HEYBURN.
BULLET LOCATED UNDER RIB
Out of Shape
Chicago—The first X-ray. plate which
definitely shows the bullet in Colonel
Roosevelt's chest was developed Thurs-
day. The bullet is shown partly im-
bedded in the fracture in the fourth
rib. about four Inches from the stern-
patient had been growing steadily
weaker. Thursday the doctors thought
he was slightly improved, but death
came suddenly.
No arrangements have been made
for the funeral, but the body will be
taken to the old home of Senator
Heyburn in Birmingham, Pa., for
burial.
Senator Heyburn was born In Dela-
ware, May 23, 1852, his parents being
Quakers of English descent. After
being admitted to the bar in 1876, he
practiced law continuously until he
entered the senate. He married Miss
eight games were $490,833, and each
Red Sox player received $4,024, while
the Giant players came in for $2,566
It was a game of excitement and
changing emotions for the 17,000 spec-
tators who went to Fenway park to Bee
the teams which had struggled valiant-
ly for seven games with honors even,
meet in the deciding contest. Never
was a ball game more bitterly fought,
for it was not until twilight had fallen
upon the tenth inning that the red-
stockinged YerkeB flashed over the
plate with the winning run. Nine in-
nings of,a pitching duel between the
master boxman of the Giants, Christy
Ohejetein Yeatman, who survives him.
They had no children. , _ ,.
Senator Heyburn was one of the; Mathew.on, and the Btrlppling BedL
, ' «„*■ n,wi "Qmnlio Tno" Wnnri fnr the
senators who was most bitterly op-
posed to the placing of the satue of
ent, and "Smoky Joe" Wood for the
Red Sox. found the two contenders for
General Robert E. Lee in the capltol. championship honcrs with a tally eaclv
. Into the tenth inning the contest
I VI
CLEVELAND BOYCOTTS EGGS
j went, and the Giants chilled the hopes
| of the Boston crowd by scoring a run
] " | on a double Into the bleachers by
Said to Be Much Flattened and Spread Thirty Cent tub of 40,000 Begins Cam- Murray an<j a hit by Merkle to center
paign to Reduce Cost which speaker juggled. Hundreds of
Cleveland.—Forty thousand people | fans tore, up their scorecards, jammed
living in Cleveland and northern Ohio I their hats down over their heads and
will abstain from eating eggs for disconsolately left the grounds, for
three weeks. President Frank S. Mathewson was pitching a game which
Krause of the Thirty-cent Egg Club j was baffling Boston batsmen. Engle
issued the boycott on eggs. For the [ led off for the Red Sox in the last half
last two years the Thirty-Cent Egg' of the tenth. He had gone to bat for
The bullet"is'much"flattened"and I Club has fought the storage men, and Joe Wood. The Red Sox pinch-hitter
spread out of shape. It Is . rushed ill-1 each time, according to Krause. has sent up a towering fly to the left of
to the upper edge of the rib Several! succeeded in forcing tha price down center. Snodgrass moved over toward
smaller pieces of bone project near to thirty cents. "Strictly fresh" eggs the bleacher seats and waited for the
It. The radiograph shows an extraor-! «< M recently for forty-three cents a ball fo drop. He muffed it and before
dozen, and retailers say prices will go i he had recovered the ball Lngle was
MELIUS
10 OVSTER BAY
CONDITION BETTER AND IS ON
WAY TO RECOVERY
GREAT CARE ORDERED
Bulletins Are Reassuring and Every
Precaution Being Taken to Insure
Safe Journey for Patient
To His Home
I The Resurrec-
tion of Christ
—Its Results
Br REV. WILLIAM EVANS.D.D..
Director el Biblt Count d the Maadj
Bible Intitule, CUcafO
F01EY KIDNEYPWS
An Rkbaat la Cnnthr* QuIMm
TOR BAOKAOMB. RHEUMATISM.
KIONKYS AMB BLAPPKH
Here's Your Chance
To Own a Calile
Ranch or Stock Farm
It Is the basis for the most independent
existence of the times. Cattle are high,
grata is scarce and cannot be leased for
any length of time. The Spur Ranch
(Texas) is a famous old-time ranch now
being cut up, and from it vou can get oh
section or fifty- with any desired combina-
tion of splendid farming land for raising
winter feed. Prices low — terms easy.
Secure your ranch tract before It is
Chicago—The advisability of per-
mitting Colonel Roosevelt to depart
Monday morning for OyBter Bay was
debated at length Sunday and not un-
til after hiB physlcans had held a con-
sultation late In the evening did they
decide definitely that he might do so.
He will leave for New York at 8:08
m. Monday. Although Colonel
Roosevelt's condition was describd as
normal throughout the day it was
learned that his wound had bled con-
siderably and that he was suffering
from nervous exhaustion.
The ex-president's physicians in-
sisted that both of these developments
were to be expected and that there was
in them no cause for alarm. The
bleeding, it was explained by Dr. Alex-
ander Lambert, necessarily accom-
panied the discharge of Berum, which
Is part of the healing process. Dr.
Lambert also said that any patient
who had been in bed for a week would
suffer from nervous exhaustion and
that Colonel Roosevelt needed only to
have absolute reBt.
"I wish you would emphasize the
fact," said Dr. Lambert, "that Colonel
Roosevelt is getting on well, but that
any patient who has been in bed as
long as he will suffer from some degree
of nervous exhaustion. If Colonel
Roosevelt is kept perfectly quiet, it
will be safe for him to take the trip."
The position of the bullet which so
nearly cost Colonel Roosevelt his life
was fixed with precision Sunday. An-
other X-ray photograph, the third, was
taken and from this it was learned
that the bullet lay on the outside of
the broken rib. Until this photograph
was taken the physicians had been un-
able to state positively whether it was
on the outside or the inside of the rib.
TEXT: I Cor. IB.
1. The resurrection' of Christ w s
the seal of God's approval upon the . „—...
truthfulness of the too late. Many selections In mayriiei
claims of Jesus.) We also offer straight farming lands. Write
Chas. A. Jones, Manager for
S. M. Swenson ft Sons, Spur, Tex.
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cura
CARTER'S LITTLE ~
LIVER PILLS never ,
fail. Purely vegeta-
ble — act surely ^
but gently on
the fiver.
Stop after
GOV. JOHNSON TO FILL
COL. ROOSEVELT'S DATE.
Turns His Back on State of California
and Will Devote Balance of Time
to Eastern Campaign.
Chicago.—Governor Johnson left
here Sunday afternoon at 2:45 o'clock
over the Pennsylvania lines for New
York, where he will complete arrange-
ments to fill Colonel Roosevelt's
speaking dates in the east during the
remainder of the campaign and direct
the light. The complete itinerary has
not been given out, but it is known
the governor wil campaign in New
York City and state, and hold several
meetings in New England. He
expected to spend at least one day In
Maine and another in Massachusetts.
He will travel by special train. The
governor has sent word to California
that the shooting of Roosevelt has
altered his plans.
Liquor Case Convictions
Muskogee, Okla.—The first peniten-
tiary sentences for introducing liquor
into eastern Oklahoma since the re-
cent decision of the United States su-
preme court in the Webb cases were
meted out when Judge Ralph E. Camp-
bell of the United States court sen-
tenced Charles Quinn of Marietta,
John Archard of Madill and Henry
Smith of Ardmore to a year and a day
each in the federal prison at Leaven-
worth, Kan. These were the first con-
victions and sentences passed for "in-
troducing" liquor since prior to 1907,
when this part of the state was known
as Indian Territory.
The claims of
Christ imply eith-
er divinity or
blasphemy. Jesus
Christ, in view of
his claims, was
either God or the
most c o lo b s a 1
fraud, or the
greatest impostor
that ever lived.
His claims stand
unequaled in the
history of the hu-
man race, and on
the absolute ful-
fillment, even to
the very letter, of all these claims,
Christ bases his right to divine recog-
nition. He claimed that it was his
prerogative to forgive sin; that he was
the only way to God; that outside of
him there was no peace and no way
of Access to the Father; that unless
he was trusted and believed in with a
whole heart there was absolutely no
hope of Beelng heaven; that he was
the divinely appointed Redeemer of
the world, and that the world's re-
demption and salvation depended ab-
solutely upon him alone; that the
power of life and death was In his
hands; and that all the Old Testament
predictions received their fulfillment
In him. So strong were these claims
that on one occasion the Jews were If your appetite Is not what it should 1*
cxMB,.«ed with h, - ...J, -wu, ftKs: d5kt Arts;
sign showest thou us If thou be all ,way the germs, rid you of Malaria and
that thou clalmest to be?" In answer generally Improve your condition. Adv.
to this challenge, Christ referred to
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
Kindred Association.
"Do you want this role?"
"Much 'dough' In It?"
Comparative Luxury.
"My father has a horse and buggy."
"Yes, but my brother was run over
by an automobile."
dinarv spread arch lo the uninjured
ribs, indicating the unusual size of the
colonel's lungs and development of
his chest.
Storm Wrought Ruin
Brownsville, Tex.—Horseback mes-
sengers arriving in Brownsville from
still higher.
on second base. No one was out and
the crowd was in a frenzy of joy.
I This error cost New York the game.
Rejoice and Regret.
j Rome—The news of the signing ot
! a peace pact has been received here
with varying emotions. While the peo-
Aroused Over Presence of Outlaws
Guthrie. Ok—According to Ray
Massey of Idabel, McCurtain county,
who is. visiting here, the entire coun-
ty is aroused over the presence in
the Jack Fork mountains of the out-
Point Isabel, the coast town twenty laws who have recently been holding J ple rej0jce that the war is over, there
miles from here, reported that all j up the Kansas City Southern and other , jg a certain regret that Turkey now
buildings on Padre Island aud Brazos { trains near Fort Smith. It is gener- jiag a frep against Montenjegro—
Island were wrecked and washed away j ally understood to be the work of an , ^ jj0me iand 0f the Italian queen.
as a result of a storm. | organized gaug. j
Divorced from Leper.
Tacoma, Wash.—Mrs John R. Early
Galveston to Build New Jail
Galveston, Tex.—Galveston county
has let the contract for a new county
Jail, the present structure to be razed.
M. C. Bowden of Galveston and Van
Dorn ron Works company of Cleve-
land, Ohio, In a joint, bid got the con-
tract, their price being $55,332, com-
plete.
On 10.000-Mile Walk
Coleman, Tex.—M. L. McC.raw, who
left Savannah, Ga., on March 2, 1912,
on a 10,000-mile walking trip, on which
he averages fifteen miles a day, ar-
rived in Coleman, Tex., Monday. He
has walked over 4,000 miles, making
an average of about twenty-live miles
a day, and when he reahed here he
seemed to be none the worse for his
jaunt.
Horses Kill Aged Man
Guthrie. Okla.—A. N. Smith, aged
67 years, a Civil war veteran, was
found dead, evidently having been
kicked and dragged by a team of
horses. He was a native of Polk
county, Mo., and served in the Union
army in Company A, Sixteenth Mis-
souri cavalry.
South Honors Federals
Baton Rouge, La.—A tribute to the
Callahan Trial Is Halted.
Jacksonville. Ky.—The trial of the j
lahoma City Chamber of Commerce, WaFRahuge,t8 old.'soldiers who are fifteen men indicted on a harge of was granted a divorce from John R.
I Invited Qlfford Pinchot to address
the Irrigation -and Conservation Con-
gress, which Is to be held in the cap-
ital city some time the latter part of
November.
Donald Stronk narrowly escaped
tastant death when the motorcycle
he was riding at a high rate of speed
collided with Dr. S. M. Mayberry'B
automobile in Enid. Strong was
hmrled to the pavement, but escaped
wftfc slight Injuries.
buried in the national cemetery here I murdering Ed Callahan, halted to
was paid by the Louisiana Daughters | await the arrival of the two Johnson
of the Confederacy, meeting here in brothers aud "Dok"' Smith, also under
annual convention. A committee was [ indictment and who were arrested,
appointed to place a wreath of flowers
upon the monument which the state
Of Massachusetts erected to her dead
NaBhvllle, Tenn.—Andrew Marshall,
aged 75, an officer of a widely known
printing company, shot and killed
himself at his place of business.
Early, the leper now at Diamond
Point Hospital. She was given the
custody of the three children and $55
of Early's salary of $95 a month for
acting as keeper of another leper.
Officers Elected.
Chicago.—Qustave Bischoff of St.
Louis was today elected president of
the AmericAi Meat Packers' assocla-
^yorSdU(E« £ni5Lt&|£" ™Lng the bin 8lvlnB Scotlan<,
cinnati. treasurer. I
Robbed While At Church.
London.—The house of commons by
vote of 261 to 104 passed on its
Can Not Accept Nomination
Providence, R. I.—Prof. Courtney
Langdon of Brown University, who was
named last week as the progressive
candidate for lieutenant governor, has
notified the party committee that he
oan not accept the nomination.
Preach for Equal Suffrage
Kansas City, Mo.—Sermons explain-
ing why the equal suffrage amendment
should carry in Kansas on Novecber
5 were- preached in nearly all the
churches in that state Sunday last.
his resurrection and said, "If I do not
rise again from the dead, do not be
lleve my claim." On his resurrection,
therefore, Jesus Christ based the vii ■
dlcatlon of all his claims—as Pai 1
says, "He was declared to be the Soa
of God by his resurrection from the
dead." So long as Christ's resurrec-
tion remains an accredited fact ot his-
tory, then that Galilean peasant,
Jesus of Nazareth, Is Indeed and in
truth the Son of the Most High God,
and the Saviour of the world.
Christ's enemies realized the im-
portance of Jesus' resurrection, and
because of this, bribed the soldiers to
say that the disciples came and Btole
away his body.
What a comfort the resurrection is
to the believer, who has placed his
hope and confidence in the life to
come In Jesus Christ the Savior of the
world! The world may deride, and
mock, and sneer, and ridicule, but the
believer exclaims, "I know that my
Redeemer liveth," and this is ample
evidence that the believer's faith has
not been misplaced.
II. The. resurrection of Christ is a
guarantee of our own resurrection.
Paul'B thoughtful and inspired infer-
ence from Christ'B resurrection Is
this: "Because he lives, we shall live
also." In the words of Dr. Parker,
the apostle Is continually amplifying.
Place an acorn in his hand and imme-
diately he feelB the weight of a
mighty oak. Give him one little bulb,
and Immediately you have touched the
fountains of his eloquence and he de-
scribes gardens and paradises and
heavens. Paul saw the whole in the
part—he saw our resurrection in
Christ. If Christ rose from the dead,
then the graveyard is not a permanent
thing. The apostle will have every
little child brought back. The resur-
rection shall 'be accompanied by a
shout—does this shout intimate or sig-
nify the spirits leaving heaven and go-
ing to the graveyard claiming their
bodies? Who knows?
Without the resurrection of Christ,
there is no certainty of our own resur-
rection and that of our loved ones. If
Christ be not risen then all who have
died have perished eternally. Then
we have no hope of seeing those who
have gone before. But we have a
better 'hope than that. "Because I
live, ye Bhall live also." As in Adam
all die, so In Christ shall all be made
alive. "For If the dead rise not, then
is not Christ raised."
Firm and fast as the grave now
seems to held the bodies of our dear
loved ones, It 1b now doomed as a
fruit of Christ's resurrection, and will
be compelled one day to relax its
grasp, and yield them up to us again.
Empty as was Joseph's sepulchre
when the angel stood before it. so
shall one day be every grave on earth,
when another angel shall sound his
trumpet and It shall ring through all
the regions of the dead, and still all to
life again.
III. The resurrection of Christ man-
ifests his victory- over death and the
grave.
Up to this time, death's claims had
been undisputed. All opposition to
that dead enemy had been without
effect. Sin reigned in the realm and
coverelgnty of death, and death reign-
ed in Bin. The purpose of Christ's
coming Into the world and assuming
human form was that he might by his
own death abolish death as the wages
of sin. It was when he rose and left
the dead that Satan's empire fell.
Christ's victory over death was dra-
matically complete on the day of his
resurrection.
Wilt Soon Wake Up.
Cincinnati woman declares Bhe has
discovered a man without a fault.
Walt till they've been married ten
years—Milwaukee Sentinel.
her
the
At a Distance.
"She certainly tries to obey
mother's Injunction not to let
young men get too near."
"Why, I saw a young man with his
arm around her last night."
"I know, but she had a faraway look
In her eyes."
Out of Fashion.
"I see where fluffy skirts saved a
girl from drowning in the Chicago
river recently. The old styles were
the best styles after all."
"Huh, she probably tried to drown
herBelf because she had to wear the
flufflles."
Rose Matilda's Sprinter. 1
"Ah'B got a sprinter f'm dat ol' win-
der sill In mah flnge' Mis' Greene,"
announced Rose Matilda, who had
been scrubbing window Bills, exhibit-
ing the injured member. "Is yo' got a
pin or some sech sharp t'lng yo' cayn
git it out wi'f? Ah don' jes' wan' to
leave It in, 'ca'se dem sprinters ain'
to be trifle wif. Oh, dem's de t'lng'U
do de business," as Mrs. Greene at-
tacked the splinter with a pair of
tweezers and triumphantly drew It
out. "T'ank yo' Mis' Greene. Dem
teasers is de bee' t'lng to exkrack
Bprlnters wi'f."
A DOCTOR'S TRIAL8.
He 8ometlmes Gets Sick Like Other
People.
Even doing good to people Is hard
Work If you have too much of it to do.
An overworked Ohio doctor tells hla
experience:
"About three years ago as the result
of doing two men's work, attending a
large practice and looking after the
details of another business, my health
broke down completely, and I waa
little better than a physical wreck.
"I suffered from indigestion and con-
stipation, loss of weight and appetite,
bloating and pain after meals, loss of
memory and lack of nerve force for
continued mental application.
"I became irritable, easily angered
and despondent without cause. The
heart's action became Irregular and
weak, with frequent attacks of palpi-
tation during the first hour or two
after retiring.
"Some Grape-Nuts and cut bananas
came for my lunch one day and
pleased me particularly with the re-
sult. I got more satisfaction from It
than from anything I had eaten for
months, and on further investigation
and use, adopted Grape-Nuts for my
morning and evening meals, served
UBually with cream and a sprinkle of
salt or sugar.
"My Improvement was rapid and
permanent. In weight as well as In
physical and mental endurance. In a
word, I am filled with the Joy of liv-
ing again, and continue the daily use
of Grape-Nuts for breakfast and often
for the evening meal.
"The little pamphlet, 'The Road to
Wellvllle,' found In pkgs., Is Invari-
ably saved and handed to some needy
patient along with the Indicated rem-
edy."
"There's a reason."
Name glren by Poatum Co., Battle
Creek. Mich.
fhe rtew lattart A m*w
•M iftmi (rat Oat «e Dm. Th«r
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Gunsenhouser, M. H. The Herald-Sentinel. (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1912, newspaper, October 24, 1912; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc174584/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.