Miami Record-Herald. (Miami, Indian Terr.), Vol. 15, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, July 12, 1907 Page: 2 of 8
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Miami Record-Herald
MIAMI
DTD TER
A Human Brick
When Herman Unger a commercial
traveler flown Boston way concluded
to depart this life he desired soma
disposition of his body which would
preclude resurrection Accordingly he
decreed that his corpse be cremated
and that the ashes be mixed with suf-
ficient cement to form a solid rock
Upon his demise recently his rela-
tives carried out his wishes Mixing
five parts cement with one part ashes
they did the good Herman into a
brick Pressed into the face thereof
are these words: “Herman Unger
Leave me in peace” But we believe
that such a brick as Herman cannot)
and should not be left in peace to es-
cape resurrection says the St LouIb
Republic Herman should fit nicely
into the golden and jasper streets oi
the happy future If the road to hell
is paved with good intentions why
not pave the road to heaven with
cynical purpose? Why not prove that
no poor mortal however he seeks tc
escape happiness can fail to come
into it at last — be he no more than a
beatified brick in the pavement of the
Eternal City?
Sanitation of Small Towns
We hear much of the reduction in
the death rate of large cities In recent
years but very little about the im-
provement of the health of small
towns It is well known says the In-
dependent that all the infectious dis-
eases claim many less victims in city
life than they did 25 years ago and
the reason for it is not far to 6eek
Cities established departments ol
health gave to them ample powers
and then insisted on their being ef
fective if their appropriations were ta
be continued The consequence hai
been that not only has much suffer
ing been spared but thousands — nay
even hundreds of thousands — of peo
pie are now alive who in the words ol
one prominent sanitarian have nc
business being alive — they would have
been dead If the death rate that pre
vailed 20 years ago still obtained
Had they died their death would have
been considered as from the hand ot
God We know that their living li
the result of the taking of some very
simple measures for the prevention ol
disease
Marriage ceremonies in India ar
full of pretty incidents The chief in
cident of the better class Hindoo mar
rlage ceremony is called he Bhaunrl
It is the sevenfold circuit’of a tree oi
post or seven steps taken In unison
The seven steps are the Seven gradei
of life The husband often a boy oi
14 walks round and round solemnly
with the end of his coat tied to the
end of the cloth which Lis girl wife
wears on her head symbolical oi
their union All the time they do thli
they must not look at each other bu
upward The Hindoo is bound to in
vite his whole caste within a reason
able distance to his wedding Fire
works play an important part In the
rejoicings incident to an1 Indian mar
rlage The marriage season is limited
to two or three months of the year
How to get enough qualified teach
ers for its schools is a problem whlct
continually perplexes New York city
A member of its board of education
at the meeting last month introducec
a resolution instructing the superin
tendent to ascertain if teachers can
not be obtained from other cities H
said that there are 300 vacancies
With salaries beginning In the lowest
grades at $600 a year and increasing
at the rate of $40 for each year ol
service the pay is much better than
that offered in smaller towns but it
costs more to live in New York and
one does not get bo much for one’s
money in the way of pleasant human
intercourse as in the country
The complaints about the poor pay
of the clergy are getting loud and
nobody disputes their validity It le
a solemn fact that the ministry stands
almost alone among all the profes
slons or occupations in which the
emoluments or wages have not ad
vanced correspondingly with the in
creased expenses of modern living
The clergymen have a perfect right tc
be indignant about it
Algernon Charles Swinburne takei
" bis constitutional so promptly eack
day that the neighbors set the!)
watches by his movements Thus w
see that Rudyard Kipling is not tb
only poet in England who can Justify
Ifs existence
A Judge has decided that a venlro
man who has a farm to look aftsl
nowadays has trials enough without
having te sit on a jury Occasionally
thp goddess ’of Justice lifts the ban
( Jge tnom h?r qyeft and winks good
naturedly at the bystanders! ’
We have physical culture and sew-
ing and cooking as well as manual
training in our schools but there is
one thing lacking Are we doing the
right thing bf the rising generation In
not teaching scientific) baseball?
FUED ENOS IN KILLING
Farmer Pumpa Lead Into Wagon Loaa
of Persons
McLOUD: Standing in the middle of
the road and firing shot after shot
from a Winchester pump gun toward
ft wagon occupied by four persons
Joseph Brawley a farmer living four
miles north of the city killed Charles
Smith a farm hand and seriously
perhaps fatally wounded Miss Inez
Tonia daughter of T R Tonia a
wealthy farmer and owner of the land
Brawley farms about seven o'clock
Saturday evening
The shooting is the result of an old
feud in which T R Tonia and Joseph
Brawley are the principals Brawley
rents his farm from Tonia and sev-
eral times the men have had difficulty
about the rental About a month ago
it grew very bitter and Brawley made
his brag that Tonia would pay heavily
'or his actions
Brawley was arrested by a deputy
sheriff and a constable of Lincoln
within a hundred yards of where his
victim Smith was lying dead in tfie
'oad awaiting the arrival of the coro-
ner and the county attorney from
Chandler
Brawley had already exchanged a
few shots with W A Woods and
Warren Norris a few hours before his
arrest about half a mile north of Me-
Loud In this fight Brawley was shot
through the arm and shoulder by
Woods Brawley thought the wound
be received was fatal and was on his
TEN OKLAHOMA
MEN HUE FREED
JOHN YATES WHO SHOT NEIGH-
BORING FARMER IS ONE
OF THE NUMBER
GUTHRIE: Acting on the recom-
mendation of Warden Haskell of the
Kansas state penitentiary at Lansing
Governor Frank Frantz nas granted
citizenship pardons to John F Yates
and nine other Oklahoma convicts
confined in the Kansas penitentiary
under the contract system Yates
was sentenced on January 1 1905 tc
serve three years for manslaughter in
the second degree going up from
Greer county He shot and killed Bill
Hughes a neighbor farmer on June
J4 1904 Hughes was a pioneer cow-
man accustomed to using the govern-
ment domain pasture The home-
stead on which Yates located hap-
pened to be a part ot the Hughes
ranch and the two men quarreled end-
ing in the tragedy Yates gave bond
for $20000 the biggest ever filed in
the history of Greer county Follow-
ing his conviction Yates was permit-
ted by Judge Irwin to remain in the
Greer county jail for six weeks in or-
der that he might prove up on his
homestead prior to going to the peni-
tentiary During his term in the peni-
tentiary Yates has been a trusty and
for some time has been driving the
prison ice wagon He will be re-
leased on August 11
The others pardoned by Governor
Frantz include the following: Lewis
Adams from Oklahoma county serv-
ing two years for grand larceny
George Thompson and Fred Duse-
borne Pottawatomie county one year
each for grand larceny John Blak6
Lincoln county one year for felonious
assault H E Richardson Oklahoma
county two years and six months for
forgery Jim Taylor Caddo county
two and one-half years for petit lar-
ceny Jack Rail Cleveland county
four years for larceny Sherman Es-
tes Pottawatomie county one and a
half year for grand larceny
Teachers attending the normal at
Sulphur were given practical lessons
In grafting Grape vines In Col Ren-
fro’s big vineyard were the basis ot
illustration
HOLDING FARMERS’ INSTITUTES
Secretary McNabb Rounding Out the
Annual Sessions
GUTHRIE: Secretary C A Mc-
Nabb of the Oklahoma board ot agri-
culture expects to commence the
round of the annual sessions of coun-
ty farmers’ Institutes in August be-
ginning wih the southern counties of
the territory and has already an-
nounced hese institute dates: ’
Elgin Comanche county August 12'
Anadarko Caddo county August 13
Hobart Kiev a county August 15
Mangum Grreer county August 16
Berlin Rogers Mills county August
17 Norman Cleveland county Aug-
ust 20 Shawnee Pottawatomie coun-
ty August 21 Chandler Lincoln
county August 22
Mr McNabb makes another round
this week of the series of special In-
sltutes now being conducted in Grant
Garfield Kingfisher and Canadian
counties for experimental purposes
The Rose creamery at Alva shipped
its first car of butter to Chicage last
week
two
COLLINSVILLE: About two hun-
dred members of the Farmers' Union
met here recently and arranged to
open a large department store to be
known as the "Farmers' Clearing
House” They are trying to raise
funds with which to- erect a modern
brick store bqlldjng with a hall above
for the use ef members One of the
leaders said recently that unionism is
stronger today in the Cherokee nation
than ever before in the history of the
southwest and "predicted great things
for the union people both politically
and financially
if MEET
j
j
1 col'STlTUTIONAL
CONVENTION
WILL MODIFY
FEATURES
PROBABLY
MANY
ML 1MEHG TIE RIGHT If FMISE
8chool Levy May Be Raised and
Legislative Apportionment Cor-
rected to Conform to Census
Now In Progress— State- s
hood Consideration
GUTHRIE: Placing Immediate
statehood above every selfish and
party Interest the delegates to the
constitutional convention which re-
assembled in this city Wednesday
will meet every objection urged
against the proposed Instrument by
the republican party by correcting and
eliminating the sections complained
of according to the sentiment of the
delegates that have already arrived in
Guthrie
It is now practically conceded that
the legislative apportionment will be
amended either by increasing the
membership and distributing the add-
ed number among the supposed re-
publican seecticns of the state in the
northern half or by transferring floto-
rial districts from the southern to the
northern halt of Oklahoma It is
probable that Oklahoma county will
be given another representative in
the distribution The assurance has
also been given that the restriction
preventing any county front having
more than four representatives cr
three senators no matter what the
population will be eliminated
The provision of the constitution
disfranchising all persons actively-engaged
in the military or naval serv-
ice of the United States will be
amended so as to permit soldiers and
sailors enlisting in Oklahoma to ex-
ercise the right of franchise at the
point of their original enlistment
Foreign corporations will be per-
mitted to appeal their cases or take
change of venue to the federal courts
without forfeiting their charters to
transact business within the state
and the provision that gives the right
of a Jury trial in all contempt pro-
ceedings probably will be so amended
as to allow judges to punish con-
tempt shown in open court or in the
presence of the court without a hear-
ing before a jury
An amendment may also be adopt-
ed to the revenue section cf the con-
stitution allowing school districts to
levy taxes up to ten mills for school
purposes
In the legislative apportionment it
is believed that several of the floto-
rial representatives and senatorial
districts in Southwestern Oklahoma
will be abolished and that a number
of such districts will be created
through the Cherokee strip which is
generally regarded as the republican
stronghold of Oklahoma
The apportionment in Indian Terri-
tory so far as can be learned will
not be altered as it Is believed that
the apportionment in the eastern half
of the proposed state Is equitable
Shculd the number of representatives
and senatorial districts in Oklahoma
be increased however it is probable
that a corresponding increase will be
made on the Indian Territory side
The Enid Eagle wants eggs sold by
the pound Every chicken fancier in
Oklahoma will wonder why Jake Ad-
mire doesn’t buy eggs from his favor-
ite kind of hen when he will piofit
by trading by the dozen
WANTS HIS FREEDOM
Old Geronlmo Said to Have Attempted
to Escape to Old Mexico
LAWTON: The report that the
Apache warrior Geronlmo recently
sent out from nere had attempted to
make his escape while attending a
celebration at Cache on the fourth is
confirmed by a newspaper correspond-
ent writng from Cache
He Bays that Geronlmo left Cache
s if to return to the Fort Sill reserve
tion but that he turned southward
after leaving town and was in hiding
during the night on a stream while
several soldiers were hunting for him
The next day he was captured and
taken back to Fort Sill
Geronlmo is credited with saying:
"Apache tired all time stay here Me
go big plain help brothers get killed”
It is believed that he was headed
for the Apache reservation near El
Paso
Fort Smith Oklahoma is now said
I to be the most thriving town in the
eastern part of the new state
The Tecuinseh city council is sink-
ing a test well for the city water
works It is now down over 300 feet
and several excellent veins of water
have been struck It Is proposed to
go 400 feet deep in hopes of finding
such a flow of water as to mane cer-
tain a sufficient flow of water for the
city at all times '
v
t The general prediction is that the
Indian Territory will show more popu-
lation than Oklahoma when the new
census is taken
Collieries Under (fie Sea
' ' At Cape Breton there are Immense
colleries being worked under the
ocean These submarine mines cover
a thousand acres and are being in-
creased steadily The mines are en-
tered at the shore and the operators
follow the vein beneath the water for
more than a mile It might be ex-
pected that the weight of the water
would force its way into the mine
The bed of the ocean is as tight as
a cement cistern A sort of fireclay
lines the submarine roof of the mine
and the sediment above is held in
place and packed down by the water
pressure until there Is not a crevice
nor a drop ot water from overhead
LIFE
INSURANCE A
TRU8T
SACRED
Responsibilities of Officers and
rectors
Dh
Evidently President Kingsley of the
New York Life Insurance company
has learned the great lesson of the
times with respect to the responsibil-
ity and duty of directors of corpora-
tions Speaking to the new board of
trustees on the occasion of his elec-
tion to the presidency he emphasized
the fact that “life Insurance is more
than a private business that life in-
surance trustees are public servants
charged at once wlth the obligations
of public service and with the respon-
sibilities that attach to a going busi-
ness which at the same time must be
administered as a trust”
He alse realizes that similar respon-
sibilities rest upon- the officers of the
company “I understand” he says
“your anxiety in selecting the men
who are day by day to carry this bur
den for you who are to discharge this
trust in your behalf who are to ad
minister for the benefit of the people
involved the multitudinous and exact-
ing details to which it is impossible
for you to give personal attention My
long connection with the New York
Life — covering nearly twenty years—
tjy- service in about every branch of
Ve company’s working organization
gives me as I believe a profound ap-
preciation not merely of the heavy
burden you have placed on my shoul-
ders but of the standards of efficiency
the standards of faith the standards
of integrity which must be main-
tained at all times by the man who
serves you and the policyholders in
this high office”
Best of all perhaps he feels that
words are cheap and that the public
will be satisfied with nothing short of
performance “My thanks therefore”
he continues “for an honor which out-
ranks any distinction within the reach
of my ambition cannot be expressed
in words they must be read out of
the record I make day by day”
MADE A NEW FASHION
Gpod Joke Played In Old Days
Would-Be Fashionable
on
Old Camden in his “Remains” tells
a good story of a trick played by a
knight upon a would-be fashionable
shoemaker Sir Philip Calthrop
purged John Drakes the shoemaker
of Norwich in the time of King Henry
VIII of the proud humor which our
people have to be of the gentlemen’s
cut This knight bought as much fine
French tawny cloth as should makt
him a gown and sent it to the tailor’s
to be made John Drakes a shoe-
maker coming to this tailor’s and see-
ing the knight’s gown -cloth lying
there bid the tailor buy cloth of the
same price and pattern and make it
of fhe same fashion as the knight's
Not long after the knight coming in
to the tailor to be measured for his
gown and perceiving the like cloth
lying there asked whose it was
'John Drakes’ the shoemaker who
will have it made of the self-same
fashion that yours is made of” “Then
make mine as full of cuts as the
shears will make it!” John Drakes
had no time to go for his gown till
Christmas day when he meant to
wear it Perceiving the same to be
full of cuts he began to swear at the
tailor “I have done naught but what
you bid me” quoth- the tailor “for
as Sir Philip Calthrop's garment is
even so have I made yours” "By my
latohet!” quoth John Drakes “I will
never wear gentlemen’s fashions
again!”— London T P’s Weekly
COULDN’T KEEP IT
Kept It Hid from the Children
“We cannot keep Grape-Nuts food in
the house It goes so fast I have to
hide it because the children love it so
It is Just the food I have been looking
for ever so long something that I do
not have to stop to prepare and still is
nourishing"
Grape-Nuts is the most scientifically
made food on the market It is per-
fectly and completely cooked at the
factory and can be served at an in-
stant’s notice either with rich cold
cream or with hot milk if a hot dish
is desired When milk or water is
used a little sugar should be added
but when cold cream is used alone
the natural grape-sugar which can be
seen glistening on the granules is suf-
ficiently sweet to satisfy the palate
This grape-sugar Is not poured over
the granules as some people think
but exudes from the granules in the
process of manufacture when the
starch of the grains is changed from
starch to grape-sugar by the process
of manufacture This in effect is the
first act of digestion therefore Grape-
Nuts food is pre-dlgested and is most
perfectly - assimilated by the very
weakeat stomach "There'll a Rea-
son” -
Made at the pure food factories of
the Postum Co Battle Creek Mich
Read the little health classic "The
Road to Wellvllle” in pkga
CO-OPS BID
OKLAHOMA FARMERS’ UNIONS
MERGE TO FIGHT COTTON
OIL COMBINE
TWENTY 611 COMPANIES ARE AFFILIATE
Large Plants are Being Erected which
are Expected to Become Mem-
bers of This Protective Aaso-
' elation— Big Warehouse
- at 8hawnee '
The final organization of the Farm-
ers’ Union Co-Operative Oil Mill
company which’ now has a new oil
mill under construction at Guthrie
has just been completed by the elec-
tion of these officers: President W
A Fox a director of the Payne county
co-operative Ginners’ association
vice president W F Belden of Mara-
mec director of the Pawnee county
Ginning company secretary A
Whitney of the Logan county co-operative
company treasurer J C
Wicks also of Logan county
The company is composed of twenty
farmers’ union gin companies located
in Payne Pawnee Lincoln Logan
and Kingfisher counties and is es-
sentially a farmers’ union proposi-
tion It is capitalized at $100000 and
is erecting a plant with a capacity of
sixty tons daily
In addition to the twenty union gin-
ning plants now in operation or in
course of construction in the counties
named the construction of gins has
been decided upon by various other
local unions in Oklahoma and it is
expected that all of- these will ulti-
mately be affiliated with the new cot-
ton cil comany as they can thus get
a higher price for their cotton seed
than in any other way
The union members have gone into
this business as being the only feasi-
ble method of fighting the combination
which they claim now controls the
larger pert of the Oklahoma oil mill
This combination has for several
years past fixed the price of cotton
seed usually prying $10 per ton It is
claimed by men who are in a position
to know that cotton seed ought to
bring at least $15 per ton and thqt
under present prices there is approx-
imately $12 clear profit in every ton
handled by the combine
Most of the union gins now in oper-
ation were very successful last year
This was especially true of the one
at Crescent It ginned altogether 2-
500 bales which is a little more than
a third’ of the cotton gfnned there
from last year’s crop The union gin
will be able to’ declare a net dividend
Df about 35 per cent It has been un-
der the direct management of Presi-
dent Caldwell of the Logan county
onion
Another Important move on the part
of the union Is the completion of the'
Ians for the building pf a monster
sotton warehouse at Shawnee It is
to be constructed at a cost of $25-
300 300x500 feet with concrete
Boors and five acres of lardage
The plan is co-operative and the
farmer will have an opportunity of
storing his cotton and be protected
from a fluctuating market A bond
will be issued as a receipt which can
be cashed or used as collateral The
main feature of the proposition is the
esultant better price that the farmer
is bound to obtain for his products
As thiB is the only warehouse within
a large radius many farmers will
doubtless take advantage of it
An upper story will be fitted up
with commodious rooms for the ac-
commodation ’of the headquarters of
the farmers’ union of the territories
which are located in Shawnee Efforts
will also be made to locate the state
offices of the Federation of Labor in
the building
WIFE CLAIM3 PROPERTY
Asks Court to Award Her the Belong-
ings of Her Eloping Husband
GUTHRIE: Mrs Cora A Whipple
who was deserted ' recently by her
husband Frank Whipple when he
eloped with Pearl Hall the wife of his
tenant has commenced an action in
the district court here against Whip-
pie which prevents him from dispos-
ing of any of the property interests in
Coyle this county Whipple is still a
fugitive from justice Sheriff Bart
Murphy having a warrant for his ar-
rest for abduction In her petition
Mrs Whipple declares that her hus-
band took over $1000 with him when
he left with Mrs Hall
The Whipples were married in Still-
water on January 17 1894 They have
had three children two of whom are
dead The living ohild Ralph is
about five years old The death of one
child preceded Whipple’s elopment by
about one month In her petition Mrs
Whipple charges her husband with un-'
faithfulness naming the Hall woman
as corespondent and with being a fugi-
tive from justice She does not ask a
divorce’ but that all Whipple’s prop-
erty be awarded to her as temporary
alimony that his quarter section farm
near Coyle and all other property be
given her as permanent alimony and
that she shall be awarded the custody
of the child
Greer county has offered a prize
to the grower of tlie best bushel of
corn this year
KILLS SLEEPING DAUGHTER
Mother Then Commits 8ulclde During
Husband’s Absence
ARDMORE: His daughter dead
and his wife dying the bodies lying
with the heads reposing on the same
pillow the little bed room splashed!
with blood Joseph L Thomas of RofC
returned to the home that be had left
only two hours before to find It a
charnal house '
The terrible deed was committed
by Mrs Thomas In a fit of temporary
insanity brought on by constant
brooding over her poof condition oC
health and the fear that death would
soon separate her from her daughter
whom she idolized
In a note which she left for her
husband Mrs Thomas stated that she
felt that she could live but a short
time and that she had determined to
end her suffering and that she could
not begr the thought of leaving her
daughter behind
Mr Thomas had been away from
home but two hours when he re-
turned to find all the doors and win-
dows locked Breaking down one of
the doors he effected an entrance to
the house and stepping' to his wife's
bed room door found the bodies of his
wife and daughter lying across the
bed
From the position of the young
woman’s body It was evident that her
mother had fired the fatal shot while
her daughter slept and death was un-
doubtedly Instantaneous Lying down '
beside the dead body of her daughter
Mrs Thomas had then fired another ‘
ball into her own bran 5 When found
the bodies were weltering in blood and
the little room was like a shambles i
El
HE ASKS WHEN REPUBLICANS
BECAME 8TICKLER8 FOR
CONSTITUTIONALITY j
i ‘ i
TISHOMINGO: Relative to state-
ments that Attorney General Bona
parte had advised that the enabling
act is unconstitutional in that it’ at-
tempted to delegate the authority of
admitting states to the president
William H Murray president of the
constitutional convention said:
“Since when did the republican
party become a party of strict con
structlon of the constitution of the
United States Their record has
been that they were limited only by
the ‘general welfare clause’ in the
preamble of the constitution of tha
United States Now they say we must
comply with the enabling act and the
constitution of the United States and
yet they claim that the enabling act
passed by themselves is unconstitu-
tional " - J
Moreover the enabling act framed
the five congressional districts of the
proposed state by the most patent
gerrymander and then they say w
must comply with the enabling act
and that a compliance must in part
consist of a legislative apportionment
which contains no trace of gerry
mander without furnishing us tht
population upon which to make an ac-
curate and correct apportionment
“The republicans can ignore our of
fer if they want to Anyhow two re-
publican members of the convention
are on the apportionment committee
and they will either have to speak oi
forever hold their peace”
First Wheat of the Season
ENID: The first new wheat of the
season was marketed in this city
Four farmers within five miles ol
Enid are threshing their grain Tht
price paid was 75 cents
CLEARED OF MURDER CHARGE
Mao Alford Accused of Killing Cattle-
man Released
MUSKOGEE: Mac Alford twice
tried for the murder of Cycero Davia
wealthy cattleman near Eufaula
and1 under indictment for the murdet
of William Spivey near Porum four
years ago was released from custody
and District Attorney Melette Issued
nolle prosseque deciding that tbs
government did not have a case
against Alford
In the trial before the commission-
er’s court Alford turned state’s evU
dence against Bob Davis and Ben
Graham His evidence in these pro-
ceedings could not be used against!
him
New postal laws went into effect
July 1 increasing the pay of rural
carriers according to the length of
route served and eliminating the ne-
cessity of special delivery stamps
Hereafter ten cents worth of ordinary
stamps will serve the special delivery
purpose if the words "special deliv-
ery” are written on the envelope
Republicans to Hold Meeting
MUSKOGEE! Grant Victor chair-
man of the Third congressional re-
publican commlttef has called a
meeting of the committee In Tulsa
July 12 to Bet a date for holding a
convention to nominate a republican
candidate for congress from this dls-
trict This convention was called to
meet at Tahlequah May 30 but the
convention wah called off It is likely
that the convention will be held in
Tahlequah on whatover flute is de-
cided upon t
V
iff
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Miami Record-Herald. (Miami, Indian Terr.), Vol. 15, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, July 12, 1907, newspaper, July 12, 1907; Miami, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1748274/m1/2/?q=Birth+of+a+Nation: accessed June 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.