The Cordell Weekly Beacon. (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 8, 1906 Page: 2 of 8
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1
THE CORDELL WEEKLY BEACON, THURSDAY, FEBRCAR5T 8, 1906.
Y£ W TRAIN SER VICE
than
Beau-
clear ly
Judge
! mistake.-;
we can.
ii.' re
Cordell Beacon ...
| champ's official and private act*, The writer, in company with
Official countr P-p. - f ar M we h tve ib.-erved, and Sbean, secretary of the Com-
__-==^ 1 we have been prettv familiar with Club, went to Enid Thurs-
8. u BtKjcim. i Pk-p ^ recordf „ide from the ap- i J morning to meet the repre-
====77^ point.i,-nt of Denton a. receiver rotative, of the town- along thi-
B%Tt-^ " of the Citizen's Bank, the Judge line of the Frisco who were ia-
Envervd at tb«
u Mcoad-c
Po„.,'D,-e m cor«e'i. ok.* has done nothing to be criticized vited by Secretary Strnmona of
for HLj ^ lrjend, realize the Eo,d Commercial Club to
that it would have been the bet- meet tbere and Plans and
XaVYcg ICvxTsents
Friendship, Washita Co., Okla.
Grow th« lariat and most compl«t« liu« of N'ar*
e-ry stock in Oklaftaoma. Sal^mnn
wanted at occ«. Write for particular*.
THURSDAY, FEB. $.
u-r thing to have done, from a! t® me,t the Frisco passenger!
■_ —1=? popular and political standpoint, ^"ts in an endearor to g*t an I
Senator Patt r-on his put h a to have app .inted the man for re - <* «t. nal tra.n put on from Enio
O K < nPre-ide't Roo-evelt. H«- .-eiv.-r whom the depositors want- to Vernon, connecting with the |
given the pr-ident cn-d.t for ed, though it is not any morecer- |[** mai1 from 6t' Lou* t0 fcou1' I
Eleven
f the twenty-three towns
Divi-ion
; any
being sineer , though somewhat tain that the bank's interest?
vav ilatine, in bis attempts at re- would have been greatly increas-j tfent representatives.
form. Ud bv su-h an appointment. P*a*enger Ag^t F. L. Clark .of,
However, the prosecution and Wicnita, and Traveling Pa*>enger,
Governor Fra z and "Col." eviction of Isenberg in this case Agent Farrington of Chickasha,
John Abernathy are in Washing C(julJ Qot haye chinged tao senti-1 weie tber-. The railroad officials |
ton at the rnjue-t . f Roosevelt. ment of heQefiuJ him iQ the j came meiely to learn what the
lea>t and we ate glad to see him | t wU8 had to offer them in the
make the te-t of the situation.
"Kexc CoraeW Kxvxser^
I ikDtlotofurni my friends that i ba*e mored my nurw-rjr from Burn,
tii Cordell l ■ am prepared n> furnish freeta, clean atock In anr quaDiny
Hold jour urd-rn for me. Write me for order nun* mod Information.
My price* are lo .
W. VV. THOMAS
Cordell. Okla.
The wise one- 4 ik«* it t mean th -
appointment of Abernathy t
succeed Bill F s-ett a« Mar-hil. j
The New York supreme court
has decid-'d that H. H. R ger-
do*s not have to an-wer Missou-
ri's q aes ions conceroir g the
m> tho is of Standard Oil. Thus
do we see the palladium of our
1 bvrties protected against the in-
q .i-itive. Tt e poor mu-t have
the pr tec ion of the courts.
BETWEEN TWO FIRES.
Editor Biblack wrot- up h
spier account « f Mr-. Carrie Na
ti- i.'s s*le of her printing plant
and building to a, wholesale liquor
firtu, tnd Carrie came back at
him wiih a $2000 lit>el suit; al-o,
in the next .-sue of her paper *h -
referred to Niblack as being
"crazy drunk'' wh-n he wrote
the arti ;le. Ntbsb^Ctine wrutliy
that any such imputation fh u d
go out that he could only g« t
drunk when "crazy" ;jpd I a*
brought a counter suit agains
Carrie for the same amount
Tuus do we see t he "Broiher'n
an<l S -U'r'n" of our '-ap tal city
"dwell together in pi-a -e."
We were told wnile at Enid
Fri«l «y th it th«* ca.-e of The Ter-
ritory against Editor Isenberg for
libeling .luilge Beam h imp was to
be set.led. isenberg plying th
c si«. We believe that this dis
position o the case lo be ihe bet-
ter way. It was a mistake on the
pa' t of Ju Ige Beauchatnp to pur
lnit th ; tilit.g of this suit in thi>
county. It would have been •
mi-take to have brought it any
where. If the judge had begun
to take «xcepiions to Isenberg's
articles early in his administra-
tion, then it would have been
good policy to have brought lln-
euit—at home—but since he re-
m ined silent for years under in-
constant prodding, it. would h v
b.en Letter to have let tne mat-
ter gone on in the same old way.
The outsider can always see one'b
The newspapers over the terri-
tory are devoting conei^r. ble
pace to a discussion of what they
should do with reference to the
putduation of liquor Dotices.
Judge Irwin has held that the
right to refuse one of the notices
is given the publisher of the news-
piper, Immediately on theau-
(iouueemeut of this decision, the
advocaies of temperance saw the
way to prevent any further Is-
suance ot license in tiie territory,
And, of course toe other fellow
-aw it two. The editor who had
a u< tion that the liquor busine-a
was n t a good business was look-
ed to to voluntarily as-utAe the
duty of saying that the business
of the country should be tun a<-
c ading to his notion, since he
had the meaus to enlorce i , not
*iihstanding the nossibitity that
tie and his fatnth might be con-
siderable losers in a tiuincial wa>
by such action. On the other hand,
if the editor was conscientiously
and consistently temperate in
habit and, because he did *not
p.itr uiiz i the liquor men, that
business and class of business men
tabooed him and knocked on his
business continually, what obli-
gati n would there be resting up-
on him to accept a notice to
further a business that he believ-
ed to be a datriment to any com-
munity? There are mmy sides to
the matter and subject to many
different constructions. All are
in re or less liable to look at it
from a prejudiced point of view.
So far as the papers in this coun-
ty are concerned, it is not likely
that they will be called on to de-
termine their course soon.
LOST OUT.
Why Refer
to Doctors
Because we make medicines
for them. We give them the
formula for Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral, and they prescribe it
for coughs, Colds, bronchitis,
consumption. They trust it.
Then yoii can afford to trust
it. Sold for over 60 years.
•• Ayer' Cherr^ Peetornl l« * remedy th t
■hom<l be In e err liome. I h *e u.ed a irreat
deal of It for l.mrd'ronphu and eolda, and I
know wltat a aplandld niadlclue It la. I can
not recommend It too Illicitly. — Mark K
Guhb*. Hyde far*. Mu .
A
Uada bT 4. Q.ar;r Co., Lopell,
Alio iDADuCMturtfri of
1
yers
SARSAfAKILLA
PILLS.'
NAIB VIOOK.
Ayer's Plli groatlypld the Cherry
Saotojal In tor—
up a cold.
W. W. Duke, who filed his ap-
pli«ation for liquor license to run
a saloon at Foss, has lost out.
The Commisssoners were in ses-
sion Friday and sustained an ob-
jection to the publication notice.
A remonstrance was filed and
when the case came up Attorney-
Brett for the remonstrators ob-
jected to the publication notice
on the ground that it was not
published for two weeks. The
statutes provides that a liqnor
notice shall be published for two
weeks in two papers of largest
circulation. The Commissioners
held that two weeks means four-
teen days, and as the publication
notices were only in two issues of
the paper, it did not comply with
the law, that it would have to ap-
pear in three issues to cover a
period of two weeks. Under-
stand an appeal has been taken.
way of increased traffic. They
l wanted to know how much more
' money it would put into the
h inds of the railroad if they were
to give us the additional and bet-
ter service. The situation was
canva-sed as thoroughly as the
situation could be without the
actual f cts of how many people
took other means of transporta-
ti >n between towns, and to what
extent traffic was diverted to
other lines at junction points by
reason of only one train a day be-
ing run. The officials did not
protui-e anything definite to the
towni on the proposition, but
they requested that the matter
reach the in in the way of a writ-1
ten request from ea« h town with
a careful showing of what tbat|
town deemed p< ssible with the
increased train service. Person-
ally, they expressed their willing- j
ne s to do all they could to gath-
er the data and put the matter in ;
proper shape for presentation to '
those whose business it is to firal-
iy pass upon the matter. The
several t -wns ought to do all I
they can to bring this about for
the inauguration of this train
will bring the mail from eastern
points into C >rdell twelve to
ighteen hours earlier than we
are n< w getting it.
It will permit a business man
anywhere on the line to go to
Enid or to Wichita and return in
one day and two nights, only
taking him from his business one
lav,where a* he now spends three
days and two nights to do the
s:ime thing.
The wholesale interests of Enid
tendered a banquet to the visitors
and Secretary Simmons showed
us every courtesy at bis com-
mand. The' feeling among all
was that there was a strong prob-
ability, at least, that the train
service would be put on as an ex-
periment in the near future.
Under the schedule that was
shown us as the probable one
that would be adopted, the train
south would leave Enid at 10:45
and pass here at 2:4X. Returning
north the tr.iin would leave V« r-
non at 10:00 P. M., passing here
at 1:45 a m.
a. L. THURMOKD. Pres.
J. M. AHMF1KLO, Vlce-Prt*.
C. H. TINKF.K. CHaliin
COUNTY DEPOSITORY
cordell. 0KLH0MA
CAPITAL STOCK $25,000
WE DO A CENEFAL BANKING BUSINESS
A. L. Tburmond
RlcLnrc A. Blllups
DIRECTORS!
E. K. Thurmond
W. A. Bl" ln *e"amltri
I, C. Ti uriDonfl
C. H. Tinker
J. S. NORTON
Xieal Estate
T .nans
We meet any rate and give the best privileges.
Notarv Public
J. S. NORTON
Cordell. Oklahoma
c. T. MtTtRELL
F KAN K K. PKNN
MURKEIJIJ & I'ENN
Boiwlod Abstracters
Photographer Porter, south-
west corner of square, Cordell.
JS THERE AXrTHING IN IT?
It is now stated a poll of Indian
Territory is being made, which
will be submitted to the managers
at Washington and if it shows up
right, then the statehood bill will
pass. There may be more than
passing significance in the sugges-
tion. It is up to the usual tactics
of that party to seize every op-
portunity to further its ends and
to seize it early. The formation
of Republican clubs throughout
the territory will give it a fine or-
ganization and form the sluiceway
through which the barrel may be
effectively u^ed in winning the
firtt election. It would be well
for our fellows over there to look
a little out.
Money on
hand for
Commutation.
Privilege
granted to
pay
loan off
after
one year.
Fiirii! Loans
FARM AND
CITV
PROPERTY
FOR
SALE AND
TRADE
-We
have the
only \
C' niph te set
of
abstract
books
in Washita
County
Office in City Nat'l Bank BUiir ,
Cordell, -- Olxla.
WW
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Burnette, S. C. The Cordell Weekly Beacon. (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 8, 1906, newspaper, February 8, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc182254/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.