The Cordell Beacon (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 30, 1914 Page: 4 of 10
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COME
COME
COME
COME
COME
COME
COME
To The Opening
or
The PRINCESS
Saturday, Aug. 1
£•"5 -• v. „ „ x,'v ' • '
A
A
N
OR
COME
COME
COME
KEYSTONE
And Three Other Reels
5 c and I Oc, No More, No Less.
COME
COME
COME
COME
CLEAN CAMPAIGNING
There is a great howl going up Just
now from the McClintlc Con grew Iona
camp about "Clean Campaigning," and
at the tame time Jim and hla suport
era are putting in circulation more
mud slinging rot than all the other can
didates combined. Several have re
ceived circulara already thia week
from his headquartera maligning and
caating aspersions on the character o
Judge Tolbert. There la poaitively
no justification for either to have beer I
issued, as they contain nothing but j
a misrepresentation of the facta the>
purport to give the public on the evr |
of eletcion. In reference to Judge Tol •
bert. one of these circulara says:
-Thia is the same man that refused
to try a poor little woman who w i
in the Hobart jail and was Boon to be-1
come a mother, not withatanding llu<
mothera and fathera petitioned him to |
do so '* Thia woman referred to was
charged with murder; she waa in the
Kiowa county jail awaiting trial on a j
warrant sworn out by the county at j
torney. When her case came up foi
hearing the county attorney asked that
it be continued for the reaaon that ahe
was in a delicate condition, waa soon
to become a mother and that jurors
would not be Inclined to follow th<
law as well In such caaea, and that
the strain of a week or ten days tria
might effect the unborn child. Judge
Tolbert allowed the continuance, foil
owing the law and good public policy
On the instruction of the Judge thi
woman waa placed in a hospital ai
the county's expense where ahe gavt
biith to a child. Judge Tolbert saw
that the child was placed in a goo<?
' home and since then the mother hat
be«n releasd from jail on bond, Th
petition with the 1100 names preaent
ed to Judge Tolbert never asked foi
trial, but aakd that she be released on
I bond when the law plainly states that
such cases are not bailable offensef I
and that the District Judge has n<
power to grant bail except a petition
on writ of habeas corpus to be regul
arly filed in court and a showing mad*
j in support thereof. The record showt
that her attorneys filed no such peti i
I tion.
j One of these circulars warns thf
• voters to "Watch for unsigned state
I ments." The other circular is not |
signed.—Tolbert Campaign Committee !
AT
The WRIGHT Place
WHAT TIME WILL THE CLOCK STOP?
Men's Blue Chambry Work Shirts, Saturday, each
35 cents
T
A Real Farmer for a
Farmers Job
rHAWK M. GAULT
Dsaecrat for Presideat
STATE BOARD OT AGRICULTURE
Can you fool all
the people all the
time?
Two times you recall-
ed the old Board of Agri-
culture.
The old Board is now
trying to regain their lost
power by defeating
Frank Gault.
A vote for Gault
is a vote against
the old Board
+♦♦♦++♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
* OKLAHOMA TO THE FRONT ♦
+ liuslness done at six of the ♦
* leading packing centers in the ♦
+ west and southwest was less. ♦
* for the first three months of ♦
* 1314, than for the same months ♦
+ last year, according to figures ♦
* jus given out. The two Okla- *
* homa City plants, however, are ♦
* reported *o have handled 50 ♦
+ per cent more products in the ♦
+ first three months of 1914 than *
* they did In 19!3. Included In ♦
* the Increased business Is that +
* done in a number of new de- *
+ partments. Including rotton-oll +
* refining plants, poultry pack- +
* Ine and egg plants and soap +
* factories. The growth of the ♦
* animal slaughter busies*, how- +
* ever, is keeping well up with <•
+ the fdvance In the livestock +
+ feeding and fattening grime in 4-
* the southwest. +
+♦*+♦+*+*♦♦«♦♦♦♦*
To Fight Cattle Tick.
An ord?r has been Hsued authoriz
Jn^ the county commissioners to co
operate with the United States au
morines In a campaign to eradicate
the rattle tick in Muskogee county
*®ork will begin about July 1. Mus-
kogee is one of a number of counties
't. eastern Oklahoma that have taken
his same action. Others are Okmul
*e« . Delaware. Cherokee, Adair. Se
•quoyah, McIntosh. Wagoner and Tulsa
"IlllllllltniimUttilll
The poutry yard shoud have close
attention at this season of the year.
Insects and poultry diseases are gen
erally more numerous when the wea
. . .. . , , o ' ther Is hot and dry. For this reason
Sltleen preen. « tb. «rU I. Bo.| |( w|u tb„
Of the 300 and over general occupa
tlona In the Unled States, women
hare entered all but four.
too, Massachusetts, work In the candy
factories.
try house and keep the premses clean.
The sending of flfi.000.000 to New J. O. Crawford, candidate for Clerk
"York hardly makes a dent In the Nen of the Supreme court of Stonewall Ok
ver mint. There remained |!i75,000, lahoma, waa here Wednesday In th«
*000. I interest o his candidacy.
AT
The WRIGHT Place
WHAT TIME WILL THE CLOCK STOP?
Boy's 25 and 35 cent waists, Saturday 21 cti.
Boys'29c Holyknit Union Suits, - - 21 cts.
j. L. Lyon "Democrat
"and 1910, before the United States
"mtri-cmp rou^t had held that such al-
lotments were not taxable by the
"atate and could not be required to
-nay th-ir ^hare of the cost of stats
"government, Askew and his family
"paid under protest the aggregate sum
"of *3^3.06 in taxes.
"Subsequent to the supreme court's
"decision Askew filed suit in Orsdy
"county for a refund of the taxes that
"had been paid on these allotments.
"He obtained a Judgment February 12,
••1 Ml4. and (Srady county issued a re-
"funding bond, from which Askew re-
ceived 1350.56, less attorney's fee.—
From an Oklahoma City Dally.
if elected Secretary of State I will
ZJZr. o, «...
If vou want a real business man *ion of the School Land Department
foi Secretary of State, who does not be equally distributed to ev,*-y county
belong to *he old Haskell or Cruc>! of- in the state giving the needy farmef
ceding gang VOTE FOR J. L. the mo^y
L*OW- I shall do everything in my power to
"A controversy has broken out expend all the funds collected by the
"amonr^heDemocrats over the candi- State Game Department for game
"dacy of Jude S Askew, of Chickasha, propagation and protection and the
"for the Democratic nomination for building of water tanks for fish and
• Secretary of State. By blood Askew food protection in Oklahoma. 1 am a
"is one-sixteenth Indian and received Democrat and a business man and
" n aUotmint of tribal land, as did his have never held office and have never
"Ionwi W. wife. For the years 1909'. asked for office before.
Your Vote for J. L. Lyon will be a Vote fo Clean Government Again*
the Old Ring.
The hum of the binder now marl
the beginning in south Oklahoma •
the harvest of what promises to 1
one of the largest wheM crops ev
produced in Ihe stateCrest r ar
age and much better condition at ?
season of the year than the av< r;
form the basis for the es'inrte.
According to the latest go-ern:r.
crop report. Ok'aho a this yezr is
voting 1,46",010 ?• re* to the c
which annually l-r.^gs lr*o 0!*nV
millions of dcl'ars and th® ei-timr
of the government er.-erts place '
total crop at 35.600 000 b't he's. T
condition Is 96 pe-cent a- comnar
'o 89 for last year at this time and 8
the ten vear average.
All ov r the etate the wh=at now lr
ripe and the production is of a h1«v
quality as w«>ll as extensive. Harve
started about the fr:t of June In th
southern wheat counties and gr*dua:
ly extends northward un'.'.; the ^re-
wheat countics of Carfeld. Wocdr
and Orant are reached, and then con
tlnues acro-s the bcrder Into Kansas
Reports from nearly every section
of Oklahoma where wheat is produc
ed. and this Includes all counties ex-!
cept about twenty In eastern and |
southeastern Oklahoma, show an in
creased acreage over last year.
Should the average prices prevail
during the early marketing preiod,
wheat will bring Into the pockets of
the farmers approximately $30,000,000
before the first of August, at a time
when cash Is very much needed by
them.
«: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH
An Oklahoma Hereford a
HMIHIHtfmilWfWl
ntwnmiUMiwi"
AT
The WRIGHT Place
WHAT TIME WILL THE CLOCK STOP?
Man's Straw Hats 1 -2 Price.
I
l:euu handy 2d, a native rltlten of Oklahoma, of Hereford ancestry,
Has changed his residence to the state or Texas At the recent stock ►ho
In connection *lt>. the Cattlemen's Convention at Okl.ihums City, Ilea.
D-mdy i« the gr.md champion Hertford bull. T K Smith, of Norioai
raised this beautiful brute.
LISTEN
Hen and Young
...Men...
Beginning with Saturday, Aug. 1st
We Will Press Free
of Charge
Every suit sold by us until Jan 1st.
E ich man limited to one press each
week. We will press on Tuesdays
and Fridays.
This does not raise the price to you
one penny, but rather Ed. E. Strauss
& Co. have made it poss'ble for us
to reduce our prices from
$2.00 to $3.00 Per Suit
this season. Think of the opportun-
ity or saving that this atfords. We
now have on display 500 wool fab-
rics and a pattern for every purse
and taste.
We invite your inspection.
Callaway's
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McCurley, J. J. The Cordell Beacon (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 30, 1914, newspaper, July 30, 1914; Cordell, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc182283/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.