The Geary Times (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 25, 1917 Page: 2 of 8
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THB GEARY times
SUBMARINE SINKS
U S. TRANSPORT
SEVENTY LIVES LOST
ARE EXEMPTED
intense artillery preparation art ad-
vancing against the Gorman positions,
Russian naval forces which retired
behind Moon sound after an encage
menl last week with t! e- German |
squadron n the Gulf of Klga have left
Moon sound and arc sailing in a
I northerly direction, It was officially {
o.,= C,=ct jrrsrs; AT LEAST- until ALL THE|
OUR FIRST NAVAL LOSS siand or Hrhiliiau. between Moon Is- BACHELORS HAVE BEEN
nr TUC U/AD and and the hslliin.ta mainland. The ., . __ _ _, _ _ _ cirst
Or THE WAR Teutons who landed on the Inland of CALLED TO COLORS Swcono
Dago have reached the east coast and i run*
BISASTER ENDS ZEPPELIN RAID SS"" k°" NEW RULES FOR THE DRIFT
| Seventh
Registered B'qMh
Ninth
Tenth
Klevsnth
Twelfth
Thirteenth
London -Twelve British merchant
vessels of more than 1.600 tons were
sunk by mine or submarine in the last
week Six vessels of leas than 1.600
one i;shing \ asel were sunk
Over Under Smaller
1.600 Ton« i.600 Tone Craft
Five
C.JTZ.^srsrzzr l,berty loan s lagging Ml-
Bnt ah Fleet In the North
Strenuous Efforts Necessary This
Week to Complete Subscription.
Million
Men Divided Into Five Claaeee, on
Basis of Dependency and
Occupations.
Washington — The second call to! Fss eteenth
arms for the national army will not i *'****«th
Washington The American arru> Washington - The Liberty loan cam
transport Antilles, homeward bound ' Palgn ptogressed io the threshhold of| |
under convoy, was torpedoed and sunk ' a"cl*l expectation <and paused
by a (ierman submarine in the wai ( end of ,he week. Oct. 20., apply to married men. those with de- !
■one About seventy men sre missing -1 ' h,°,P^? ,h* '7? Pendents or thoae whose highly '
.nd probably lost TZ? Gaining 1. more va.ill'e
All the army and navy officers
■ billion dollar line would be crossed*
Apparently the big total stopped just ,7",".'!^' """""" ""
short of the mark with an estimated ,n 'U P ™ult«. If there are enough
total of $l .973.000.000 •ingle men to fill the increment of thet
The result means that the huge sum c*"
of $500,000.00 a day will have to be 1 This became known when the clas-
subscribed every day of the remain- siflcatlons of the remaining 9,000
lng week of the campaign with a hand
ful of millions to spare of the Ave bil-
lion dollar goal is reached when sub-
scription books close Oct. 27.
The five billion dollar ttital can be
attained next week, officials asserted
if there be no let up in the campaign
and If districts in the middle west. the
southwest and the west are aroused.
from an apparent apathy which thus'
far has caused great concern.
Liberty day. it is thought will be
the banner day of the campaign. A,
total subscription of ti.000.000,000 or^
aboard and the ship's master were
among the 167 survivors The miss
lng are members of the crew, three
civilian engineers, some enlisted men
of the navy, and sixteen of thirty-three
aoldlers returning home for various
reason? Neither the submarine nor
the torpedo was seen, and the trans-
port. hit squarely amidships, sank In
ttve minutes
The lost Include
Third Kngineer Officer Walker
Jun'or Engineer Officers Boyle and
O'Kourke
J. C. McKinney. second class pea-
man, Newark. N. J.
J W Hunt, second class seaman.
Mou; tain drove. Mo.
L Ausburn. radio electrician. |
New Orleans
H K. Watson, radio electrician. Rut the <«"'P Un will show in its entirely
lane Mass a W,P°BM on lh,> P"rt of the nation
Tils tragedy of the sea. the first In , ?h™^ek's" Wh°" Pr,°r
whi h an American ship engaged In Th,rP w(|1 h„v„ ^ BUch m ^
wai duty has been lost, is the first ol -ponse. n * stated, if the full IWe bll
its magnitude to bring home to the lions is taken
petple of the United States the rigors — —
of the war in which they have en Citizens Without Dependents Next,
gaged against Germany It carrier Washington. — Provost Marshal Gen-
th« larRest casualty Hat of the war of j Crowder has laid a plan before
'Kighteenth
Nineteenth
Twentieth
Twenty-first
Twenty-second
Twenty.third
p.-1 Twenty-fourth
registrants were made public A Twenty-fifth
classification Is made for every man., fwenty-slsth
which, in the order of liability, fol I Twe" y-seventh
lows. Twenty-eighth
CI*.. i Twenty-ninth
1 Thirtieth
Thirty-first
. i Thirty-second
Married men lor widower with chil- ] Thirty.third
drenl who habitually fail to upport ;
their families. Totals
Married men dependent on wife for v>rsnd total
support.
HUNS PLAN NEW WAR ZONE
COASTS OF CANADA, U. S.
AND CUBA INCLUDED.
Threat of Ruthless Murder Extended
to Entire Eastern Coaat
of America.
M.E. NORTH
APPOINTMENTS
El Reno.—The following appoint-
, nents were announced at the close of
j he M. E. North, conference here
Oklahoma Vuy—K. 8. stuckwrll. Die.
MJpt. Arlington,. <u|ipiieii b> a. L Mfvk«.
I dritton. supplied b> F \\ Steele Ca u-
J liai nes. 1'handler, C A. Mor-
Kdmond. I. H. JaduOB; Kl It-no.
• ieary. Simpson
I I.. I'rabtree.
Va*e>. Hann and
London.- According to news from 3sej,
Berlin in an undated dispatch re- f"red M. stephenaon
ceived by the admiralty by the Wire. SSESfji ,
less Press. Oermany is expecting s,,P! Hed. Jones <*ity, sup-
shortly to declare the coast, of tbe -^Il& ^ ^""^Ds'Sgh? ,
United States. Canada and Cuba war | ^
lones 1 •h«- supplied by C. L, Throughman. Ok#- I
b>\K L Itken oklahoma I
T Frank Huach. Se- i
MumnoNAi
SlINMSOW.
Lesson
(By REV. V B. FITZWATKIt. D n.
Teat-her of Engliah Bible tn Um> M«k«w
Bible Institute of Chlcajco.)
(Cupyricni. 1*17. Wm.rn Newspaper Urtioa*
LESSON FOR OCTOBER 28
ol^ .. ; ii'M. ^uppll
{similar announcements by German; "liy, Kir*t
since the war started
in 1914 hav4
Smith.
- hurch,
iTalu.^ i|* |vi£?n> '
been followed immemately by ruth i {tewltt T-cumseh and'ruio.Tu'piled by
1 bs Diilnno,-i« — a > — •— _ -' Morgan. Twilight and l-tison 11
ti 'if-' rnl<"' snd MuntaiiK. K
EZRA RETURNING FROM BABV.
LON.
I.EBBON TEXT—Esra 1:16-*.
GOLDEN TKXT—The band o( our QoJ
i a upon all them for good that m- k iihn ^
Csra S:E.
An Interval of some fifty
BANKERS TO BE INTERNED
Single men without dependent rela-
tives.
American Hves and marks the first, President Wilson that ii
success of German submarine attacks <a" lo arn's only men
Married men (or widower with chil-
Wednesday of this week Is the goaf dreni not usefully engaged, family
which hundreds of thousands of work-, supported by Income independent of
ers are striving to reach It is also his labor
thought likely that the (Uial week ol Men not included in any other de-
scription in this or othei classes
Unskilled laborers.
Class 2.
Married men or fathers if mother-
less children, fully engaged, but fam-
ily has sufficient incon*- apart from
dally labor to afford reasonabley ade-
quate support during their absence.
Marred men, no children, whose
wives can support themselves decent-
the second without hardship
without de- Skilled farm labor engaged In ne-
on American transports.
•ndents shall be accepted for service. <**B*ary industrial enterprises
That the loss of life waa not greater; yuicklv to find those whose in
is die to the safeguards with which ''U8,ry is not the means of support of
the navy has surrounded the transport °tbers. It is proposed to local boards
service and the quick rescue work of I •" those registrants as to their Ha
the convoying warships 1 blllty for service, putting those with
The loss of the Antilles marks the dependents In one column, and thoae
first red jet ton of the transport fleet j ""bout. In another Persons whose P "*nt or grandparent*, dependent ot<
(hat has been operating A very con-l !Bdu,,r1*1 q * 0cgtloBs might be a * T Uhpr ,or "uPPort
Skilled industrial laborers engaged
In necessary agricultural enterprises.
Clasa 3.
Man with foster children, dependent
on dally labor for support
Man with aged, infirm or invalid |
ii with thought
2-cook H with care
J- use lets wheat & meat
buy local foods
serve just enouih
6* use what is leit
sidermbls number of American troops.
factor, also will be classified
donr waste it
less submarine warfare in the waters
immediately adjacent to the zones gaektey; Watowy;"ti. c LMapiain: Wau- tervenes between the dedication of th*
°a8t Cllie of Ulh respenbed coun t Luther, ti. t riouT''vukoi^ Ato,|T h"? ,en,l'le n<l ,he Journey of Kura tu Pal-
re- have also been bombarded Enid—J. w Baker. Supt.Enid. ,\m . estlne. Some stirring events In Uta
-dropper, K^y Udliry; WOrld (KCUrr«1 ln ,hl" wh'«*
'Killings, f. A. subline. Hlockweh, i- v greatly helped the Jewa. It was tiar-
! Orr>™m^„ ^rnK,on' hs'urp: j ,U"' tlUle thftt ,he ''PlHO.le ,4
iiiiea by j R. Krasier. Deer ■ reeic, vv l> j Esther's being made queen and the eie-
Son of Liege General and Companion I S5Jr- 'gUi Tj^^ A^n^' uHw'^fi. ' v«tlon of Mordecal occurred, .which fa-
Hsld As Dangerous. ,'JaC-b*r; supplied by (; y. Cannon, vorably disposed the Persian govem-
leffe^T'i: "eSr.'' Jel K ",ent tOWarU ,he Th«>
New York-Frlti Kuhn, prior to the; !Und0orff" iJ^r.?:,,'n,,tor,W,l'rl. '.,> " iL UUHl,lcl"U8 f"r Esra to niake his r*
outbreak of the war. London repre-i hom". "upiilied by' i;tor«o Co'h™ Lu- (,ue8t un,° Artaxerxes. The vupreme
tentative of the Deutsche bank of teT"""'^ 'aii^dV t-la" 'alm of wa* the restoraUon of the
Berlin, and George von Seebeck, also' Mend, /upr-lled by lta>° Aitafer; Na'^i. true worship of Jehovah, for it Is evt-
,'ormerly connected with a C.erman ' drick.' Mkeene""^b> Jaines Ken- dent that tlie work done by ZerubbubH
bank In London were taken into ens ^ '' Miller; Vdnd CreekVo. >. BuierTl had largely failed of Its aim. ln order
:ody here by the intelligence bureau supHied' t)>",.T' H* riark* itiTs^"!!!"' ,h*t Kzra mi«l t be an efficient Inxtru-
f the navy department and rent to! J'b'd i>> jo><-e w.-bster. Suit Fork, -i!''- [oent In the hands of God for the ae-
'llis island for interment as danger twyfoM;^\Vaklia',',A''"l T\v'k||lwL'' " H c,,mP"Bhnjent of this pociiose, he "pre-
ius enemy aliens Fort W®r(h— H." R n«in„. P rwl his heart to seek the law of "
\ on Seebeck is tlie ron of General
Baron von Seebeck. commander of .. . . -■■r>...VI
he German Tenm army corps at cu^ suptdie^bv Y^ref''" vr a'"5 'r- <7:10)- There sre three stages ln the
Liege j a"- Te«s, Mr« chur'h H . "f ^"y true teacher. rir«t:
«oth men came from England to In Tf, ^ ''
•scape interment as enemv aliens. I f.'a"0,®iVh<i'ri'!>' s A Wa,llrs : Kutton. Po- 11?, ' • Third, to teach it to others.
- — by refutation to |
Fort War|h- m
I-, Mrannon; ApaVhe. «T"a™X' Lord and to do It, and to teach.ln 1 -
t"e statute, and ju.lgments"
Both were known
' ' K"""iu \. ' "egenast: Kik Citv. K I:
.nany Amerl sn bunkers and found ,T"a' s' lnul's. M °'
.o difficulty in obtaining employment , ForM'-n.rsn.'i ' p royal commission
*'lth the (iuaranty Trust Company of ^bh«rt"nc'rl.ln5«lai2di >y a. A.'
his city. Von Seebeck soon became ! ton; Geronimo, to be supplied "mm,""'
head of one of the divisions in the for-I ."?barV w Koblnren: (
•icn denarrment vi..r. .i— - ?! -K:.J:. VV •.'ndepemlen.-e. r M.
The last Is impossible without the I
granted to
Exra embraced—
(1) The return of all whose free will
prompted them to do so (7:13).
department More than a year I i'VThompson; 'tJawtoii'-Mn^ehSrvh f ^InB Klven .uaglstarUl
go. however, the Guaranty Trust f'S""?.. «'Hn,p """Uhan .in Por, siii, authority over the district "beyond tbe
Company dropped them from the rolls I |^okeba-KiiklVv.'°sup|>lliSf'l >"oMA Van' I .
Jf its employes because of nroGeiman I * > , M..nt«ou-Ho n.ter, supplied bV (3) Exemption from taxation to the
" ' h.?vder°r,A ; oKomT"- &hn Uevltes (7:24).
lames;' Wood Memorial c■ireUlt"'''suppll«i 1 (• ) Conveyauce of offerings from the
!orvV \viVho^<llF.n.a*ifer.for,2' ,-J «' ^1a|- k'n« ai.3 his officers (7:15, 19).
' f «per; wiehlu circuit, mwpim ^ I '• pe0i,ter of Ezra's Companion*
J„ j (1-14) Doubtless this is a represontn-
CONGRESSMEN TO EUROPE 15^"&kT m^' HsIX- ,lve ll8t ot tho^ wh0
- - • There is clear implication that the
-lympathles.
Kuhn was a friend of Von Bern-
itorff, former (ierman ambassador
workmen and others involved in the,
prosecution of tbe war have been , ew*n Alrl 4«n*« Tumble to French,
carried safely to F'ance and England Paris Eleven more German air
snd the successful attack on the first P'*nes were shot down by the French
contingent is the only recorded pre or drl*en to earth in the German lines
vious instance where the U-boats liava ,n a damaK«l condition Nancy was
succeeded even in catching sight of a*,in attacked, this time by a squad
the vessels ! ron "f thirty German machines
British Also Suffer Oisaster.
Germany scored on tbe water in last
week's news developments, which re-
corded tbe breaking up of a merchant j
convoy in the North sea by raiding
< misers that sank two British de-1
atroyers and nine of the twelve con
coyed ships She suffered little less
than a disaster in the air however.
when four and probably Ave Zeppelin
airships returning from a raid on Kng
land were brought down in French
territory by airplanes and anti-aircraft
gunfire
The sea tragedy cost the British the
lies of 1S5 of the officers and men on
the destroyers who were left to their
fate by the German raiders In their I
haste to escape, as were the crews of
the sinking merchantmen. About 100
of the merchant sailors, however, are
known to have reached the shore in|
boats or on British patrol craft All
but three of the trading ships were of
Scandinavian nationality, most of
them apparently being small vessels
The American schooner Jennie E
Kighter, of 64" tons gross, from New
Haven. Conn . was sunk by a Teuton
submarine on Tuesday off Cape VII-
lano, Spain Nine men ot the
schooner were landed at Hujia
Zspelins Again A Faiiurc.
The atory of Germany's reverse in
the air began with the account of a
raid on England In which the bombs
the /•eppelin* dropped killed 27 per
Man with brothers and sisters in- COAL STRIKE CALLED OFF
competent to support themselves de-
pendent on daily labor for support |
Uounty or municipal officers
Firemen or policemen.
Necessary artificers or workmen In ,
arsenals, armories and navy yards Kansas City. Mo —Negotiation^ for
Necessary customs-house clerks. a settlement of the differences of the
Persons necessary in transmission | coal miners of the southwest fields
Unionists Yield to Pleas of Garfield
and White and Negotiate.
and the southwest coal operators' as-
a-^vheat ■' . . .. .
US* inert corn
J-meaf •; '
us, rr&rr //rh d biknt
3-fttS
tno ugh ; .
*8u&r.
I :>•
u* # syrups
and serve
the cause of freedom
of mails.
Necessary employes in service of j sociation have begun. The district
8u,e" J presidents or the United Mine Work-
Highly specialised administrative , er9 „{ America deferred the walk-out
e*E.er,w . i which was to have taken place, after
Technical or agricultural esperts a conference with the operators and
in Industrial enterprises ! notified all local unions.
Highly specialized agricultural ex- '• . , . ... . .—
pert. In agricultural bureau of state , deferring of the strike of the
or nation «35.o00 mine worker* came after both
Assistant or associate manager of1 !!?' nd representatives of
necessary industrial enterprise
Assistant or associate manager of
necessary agricultural enterprise
Class 4.
Married man with wife (and) or
children (or widower with children)
| the mine workers agreed to disregard
the {mints of difference which led to
the strike order and resume negotla-
i tlons where they had been broken.
Alexander Howat, president of the
Kansas mine workers; John Wilkin-
dependent on dally labor for support 8°n> President of the Oklahoma. Ar
DALLAS SALOONS CLOSED
Prohibition Law Goes Into Effect A
Result of Election
Oaltas Dallas Is -'dry". The city's
212 saloons Anally barred their doors
at the regular closing time at 3d
o'clock last Saturday nigh
The closing of the saloons was the
result of the county option election,
held September 10, when prohibition
won In Dallas county by a majority ol
sons and injured S3 others Reports| ' S,r'" vo,,'K ,n this election the city
soon began tu be received of Zeppelins j 1 ,h'' only "P01 ln th<l
b- ng brought down in France The. "unt> f"' twenty five years, turned In
had appeared over French territory ' *" hut this
was overcome by the vote in the rural
llstricts.
-and were sacttsred to various parts ot |
the country as the alarm went out
and the French airmen rose tn swarms
to attack them.
The Belgian part of Ostend, whi< h I
is a German submarine bast on 11 ■ <■
and no other reasonably adequate
support available.
Mariners in sea service of mer-
chants or citisens in United States
Heads of necessary industrial en-
terprises
Claaa 5.
Officers of states or of the United
States.
Regularly or duly ordained minis
ters
Students of divinity.
Persons in military or naval service
Aliens.
Allen enemies.
eprsons morally unfit.
Persons physical!;- or mentally un j
kansas and Texas division, and D. A
Frampton. president of the Missouri
miners, however, declare that they
will not agree to the insertion of a
"penalty" clause in the contract, a
point which led to the strike order
The action of the miners came after
telegrams had been sent to both the
miners and the operators, asking that
the strike be deferred and negotiations
resumed, by John P. White, president
of the national organisat'on of the
miners and Dr' H A Garfield, federal
fuel administrator. Both were notified
of the proceedings
Ten Members to Confer With Mem-
bers of Parliament.
Washington.—Ten members of con-
gress traveling in unofficial capacity,
but carrying special passports ar-
ranged for by the state department
| to be
•Tiii: Fi'r«'Thtr« hf' JC T "(teller' SoSth i twelv« tribes arc represented among
Park. <; M. Jeffrey, Commerce, w c. tiioseawho returned. (See 2:70; tt:lfl.
V°V"c" supplied by A. J 1 IT V
I lee be; Delaware. J. A Webb, Francis- I lT''
?!,orrifie«i, V 1Jfks. h n (km- II. E*ra Sends to Iddo for Mlnlstsra
• Med by a' k 0<m?t: Kreb!!-,n!J^'/u|i: , ,or the TemP,e Ssrvica (vv. 15-20). Be-
ViIiJ!^?rii '"arpenter: 'fore the Journey to Palestine was ae-
i'i' ri-e^Nowata, nTTj ^le^"""tTels[a. T ! tua,1y hegun, Kxra gathered about him
r Htr*'cl1 .'i""?u' Hu'ison. <ikmui-| his companions who were to aceom-
are on the way to Rurope to visit the supplied* l >y'yT 6 smi«h\^'i'oiahrl™p: P*0* h,m- *° whether they wen.
iupplled by J 8. Bottoms Porter, to
'upplied. .sand Springs, I, |>. Corning:
Sapulpa, J. K. Burt; Skiatook, Cecil P.
plmpson: Tulsa, First church. J. \V Abel;
..race Kverett Simpson, iireutt Memo-
- ,T RI'*y-We.Te>> H. E. Brl'4; Wa-
goner. <J. M. Ryder.
„ A'y ~T; ? Pittenger. Alva, Supt.,Aline.
J? ..K r.l*hi- Alva- K '' Anderson. Ar- *l ons(
r.' ii.'v.-'"■ Tomlin. Hopeton, supplied i>\ £.>0 Ni
t W. Wtsidrun canton. M \V. Samson; i ...
!if')r2ft* 4 Hlmmona, rarmen, I' R. '
rrti n. Trinity,
■ tolofah.
>waa o-Turiey, representative. In this review he dls
covered that none of the sons of Laevl
were In thetoompany. So he sent chief
men to Iddo, who was doubtless the
president of the school of the Levltea,
for ministers for God's house. Id re-
sponse to this appenl. .IS lx-vltes and
Nethlnlms joined him.
Ezra Seeking the Guidanc* of
Mo^iiJiVo a ,he Lor<' (vv- 212r?>- Th* Jowri^y was
.lames. I laihart, Texas, I >e|„, m;l Binck- I fu'l «>f deadly perils. It in/ thrr
supplied''iT-l*1- N lValme,r> Ka^^w'"''^'!* reKl°D lnvp8teJ wtth BedWrtn
a ** sh« uion, Fargo, supp led by L*. a. Tat | rauders. Ezra, fully consc-loufi of t.beM
cent cabled and personal invitationt jtaskew-Mount 'olive, 'supplied11 by''™ 'V: UI"' aKhume<l to ask help of tlie king.
r f representative members of th« ,0'iTcV V,""<K- J" proclaimed a fust, ln which In
Hritish ahd French parliaments for 1 "
closer afllllation of the parliamentary
bodies of the allied governments MunVie.'"^ "\v"«5STiion?'MStu'inAl"tjl|: I l,,*,I*tlon °' ^ Independency
through personal umferences at the """P"*'1 •> «' i:. yet dependence, of the men who fullj
British. French an,I Italian capitals Pleasa.it Valley cfty/JSpplfci by^'s^M ,rtl',t <iod- 1,is chllf concern was Tor
| PW-ken. Quinlan, i' k li- at'n. ijuinian , the honor of God's name. He hud
war fronts and fraternize with the
parliamentary representatives of the
allies.
In the party are Representatives
Dale. Vermont; Taylor and Timber-
■ake. Colorado; Nicks, New York;
fohnson. Dill anil Miller of Washing-
ton ; Goodwin. Arkansas; Stephens,
Nebraska and Parker, New Jersey;
Former Representative Stout of Mon
tana and Ross L Hammond, a Fre
mont. Neb , editor and others.
The visit is a development of the re
through
Li?c<* """''stead. I-; i.. Lstiier: inger- proclaimed a fast. In which In deep
lenora city. Sippited^bv'uM.\ K.n't^ns ' l,umlllatlon they sought the guidance
1-onKdale. K. u lailier; Ma>. nuppiied r.v , and protection of God. This is a fine
H. « '/IIIns: M.«„eland. W s Franklin'; I ni„«^,...„ .h-
K. C. STOCK YARDS BURNS
City. H.
i-aster. supply
•olllns Tali
Licensed pilots.
BOB FITZSIMMONS IS DEAD
Another Former Wci ld'ft Champion
Takes The Count.
Devolt In Austrian Navy.
Washington—Official diplomatic dls
patches received here report mutiny
in tbe Austrian navy and clashes be-
tween Austrian sailors and crews of
the Germsn submarine fleet liases at
Pola. in which officers on both sides
havj been killed and
Loss of Three-Quarters of
But Well Insured
and Put nam,. c ii Hickman, viri, sup- 'the kiug of the divine sufficiency t
IV.tr \Vo'odward.T}eoJBeXy*V?>m,' "Ven- ' now ,w have t,kpJ for a guard of
v'JL'J" • b-v..'' F Huffman dlers would cuuse him to binsh *
Wed and Keystone. F. L. Hamond. .ki.
Million —" — | shame. In this critical hour they
luihrle; Agra and Irvln 'suppUed by niltted themselves to the care of Him
k.To,, ., seas
i noo "proxiruatel> iio""nd7Va.rr![eh,cb ^r lHCk!'' J'""1 No friendship or business Interest ever
11.001, cat le and .3««i hogs was of , H.^TenSlin^ill," aid I reaches Its best unless God's hand be
in Ircendiary origin persist, though 1 [uppHed bx K jones, cieneo., b X' |n u nn,i 111Kin .. .h_nM „
discredited by officials of the corpora fe, feVVhuV^ 5h"5h' | I.
ill"" T \v "Martin Kiidar^'j.'uuh?" ! "av* any Wendshlp upon which we may
tion owning the yards.
Besides the saloons. *tve wholesale
iquor houses and one biewery are af
ei ted. The brewery, however, has
tnnounced It will continue to operate.
North sea. has been bombarded from bofn *nd " l,,t
^ ... . i «lnce the law does not prohibit the
I manufacture of intoxicants
the sea. houses in tbe town being dam
a (ted
on a nine mile front between Vaux (Eight Million List of German Wounded
aille and Braye. in the Alsne reg.on Vmster.Um The German casual
ihe French have begun an artillery ties list comprising killed, wounded,
bombardment of the greatest vlolenc ■ pi isoners and mis ing. from August
at times attaining drumfire Infantry 1914 to September t#i7, till thirly
attacks have not b.-en liiunched folio volumes of 22.(100 pages Tha
On the Belgian baltlerront Anglo lotal sumbet of names aproximater
French reconnoiierlng parties, after S.26u.uiio
Colombia Proteits To Hun. Every Soldier in France Buys Bond.
Washingion The Colombian senate American Training Camp lu France
ha* passed a resolution protesting Virtually every man. officer, Held
against Germany's ruthless submarine clerk, French Interpreter and stenog-
warfare. the state department wa
vised by Perry Belden. the Amen, an
charge at Bogota
Anarchist On Way To Kill Editor
Psrls l^ecoln, it notorious smirch
1st. was arrested s< lie was .-ntsrlng
the offices of the sorlnliit in-wspap<
la Vlctorie. w t1- the avoAed u ,
kill litMtay llenc « edllm
in the A merles n fn
i ribed to the Liberty loan
sub-
Francs Seizes Shoe Factories.
Paris A ministerial decree requlsl
.ions all th" shot> facinr.es In France.
Is Intended to overcome tbe dlsinclln
at Ion of the manufacturers to tuak«
'he new national shoes m the quan-
iifin il« niiiDi)'"1
Chicago itobert Fltsalmmons
tner champion heavyweight pugilist of
j the world died
1 after an illness of Ave days of pneu- i
i mania.
The former champion's ring career |
1 began as the winner of a lightweight
competition promoted by Jem Mace at
Tlmaru. New Zealand. In 188u. He de
feated four men. knocking out three
of them and thus became the amateur
rhaniplon of the country The next
year he defended his honors, defeat
lng fl\e opponents in one night
Fltzslmmons won the world's heavy-
weight title In 18H7. when he defeated
Jaines J Corbett in the fourteenth
round of their metr.ornble battle nt
Carson City. Nev For two vear-i
Fitsslmtnons clung lo tbe honor, los
lng to James J Jeffries when he was
knocked out In tbe seventh round oC
a furious battle June 8. 18«9 at Coney
Island. N Y.
rilSHiiiimoiiM tuade a fortune in the
ring, but bis oarulngs soon vanished
Ills contest with Jim Hall In New Or-j
leans was for a purse of tto.ooo. but '
I'titslmnions only received a portion.
Ills Hist battle with Jeffries drew I
IfiS.ooo and hN second $31,000 The
receipt
been made of the loss entailed by the
conflagration, Insurance adjusters and
ifllcials of the stockyards corporation
place it at approximately $7.10.000, of
which $200.0.iii repiesents the build
j ngs. pens, and chutes destroyed and
hich resulted . " 50.nim. the livestock burned. Heavy
decision to change the base of Ihe | nsi:rance «• carried upon (he bulld-
and the live
ibis for themselves, for
hv I. simpson. Newkirk. Q. A. Klo • |kr'
ni
)'
ihuMka. A. I . Snyder,
German flotilla. The Austrian crews
hospital Item *r*" *u,d ,0 ,,ave revolted under ill
treatment of officers and bad food.
The clash with the German submarine
crews was caused by tte overbearing
'onduct of the latter
U-Boat G«ta American Destroyer.
Washington. While on patrol duty
In the war /.one, an American destroy-
er. name withheld by the navy depart
tnent. was torpedoed and badly -crip
pled by an enemy submersible One
man was thrown overboard and
drowned by Ihe force of the explosion
and live othera were wounded. De
spite
iged
ings of the st.
stock
children, and nil their substance. They
jee. F I. Stovlck; Perkins ."in,.piled" [,v kn«w ,bmt • "°°n • <hey mude flod
... A r''',r> K 1 Posse Pouca first his blessing would be upon them.
s^i^.^ui^TlyW' Hw>iUnHs^: oud " —« - they forsook him bis
r,"'.'.1 A. . stir;'a!er .■irciiit, |M>wer would be withdrawn ntid bis
kv"!\ " w bl ..''wsl'.n TV*\V t•V'snn(n'Hr,;,"l"d I ««•"'«! >e upon the,,..
sperm; Appointments— w c Wheeiei. | ,v- Th* Treasure Committed to
.Norman <)uarterl> .olVren.e. i ,,
(...rnes, chapf.iln in Culled Stales srnn.
member of Hennessey guarterly eonfer-
enre \\ c. Coleman, w.ir work Y M c
. ,_ ,. A swrrtarv in France. K .iieri I. \l ' •—
retr <grnd r o (terman torpedo member of <iuartc-rl\ conference
" Guthrie. "
Big Naval Battle Lost By CermaTis.
boats were sunk two others were
damaged and one Russian torpedo
boat went to the bottom in an engage
ment in Soela sound, north of Oesel
island The Russian torpedo craft
sunk was the Groin (destroyer of 1.100
ions, built in 1911-15, speed 34 knots,
complement of 3 men I More than a '
doren German torpedo boats had
forced their way thiough Soela sound, '
supported by' a German battleship,
the explosion, the vessel man j when they mehe met by the Russians
lo llinp Into a port nearby i and turned back.
i rny. war
First
with their faith in God, we fiml prac-
tical business sense. Honest, trust-
worthy. good men were selected (v.
1!8). To such only should be Intrusted
the Lord's money—gifts offered freely
rhurch, _ _
f:'rt;"^.-e\eme of 'VinTcfeh,5« ,hP «>* ''«
\\ II am n. Kobinsoii in servics' I n led money was
Mary Pickford Gives $90 000. 12.711.400.000 la Loaned.
I-oh Angeles The Libert) loan , Washington New loans of $50-
. ommiitee here announced that Mary to Russia. $i'o.b0i. ooo to Great
Pickford. million picture actress, had Britain $10.ii'n.n0i> France and
•nbscrlbe.l for Liberty bonds. j« uou.000 to Belgium bring the lotal
Carman WarsMp I. -„.v.g Lost. ^ V«o £'° ""le<
( openhagen. - Rumors of the loss of ! — '
a German warship in the Sound, the British Wreck Big Arssnai.
larrow strait between Denmark snd 1 London British airmen. In their
_ Sweden, are being clrculatsd The re ! recent atta. k on the Belgian town of
of his battle with Gus Rulilln I I*0"" unronflrln*<1 l'"«lers. caused the destruction oi an
were $a.'..nco and his coolest with Tom ' bui lh* ^di? of t*o German marines ] arsenal, in hlcb was <nsrlsrwd
t r^cy drew ISS.Ono | have drifted ashors in Ike newly r.rrlved German regiment
I casually roll * an enormous
vicinity of Klsinore. Denmark
The
Tulna, ,
i n ted money wus carefully counted ami
t-11> . onfi r.-iK-e,'Fiisi"?'b'"i', i1'"T"ui'br ! l',e sinount set down,
i". H Rankin, com mission.-r r.f edu- I The men were held accountable at Ihe
Ver",'".. i; *.\,s'.Ppre<sidentrof Hunt p"<1 of ,he Jo« "*ey for everything In-
'iuarieri\ .-..nt.-i.> trusted to them. Men ought to be held
ants .:',!*>wme"nfTfunt(>, Ilo "'riot account for everything Intrwt
_of Klr;' church, Uuthrt. . ed to them, to the very last rent. *n>e
inen to whom this was intrusted were
holy; the gifts were God's; they did
not belong to any man; they were
charged with the obligation to deliver
hese gifts before Ihe chief priests.
V. The Safe Arrival at Jerusalem
(vv. :il-;Ul). The Journey lasted four
months. They carried with them mil-
lions of dollnns' worth of
\ through a region Infested with
j lng Bedouins, yet God delivered them
! from their hands. At the end of the
Journey they testified to the fulthfttl
ness of God in bringing them sufely on
(v. 31). The snfe urrivni at the em)
of each dny's Journey Is due to tbe
giHsl hnnd of our God upon na. Aft«v
resting three dsys, the tres
brought Into the temple snd
'erlngs wen made before th* Um4 Je
j hovab.
lerly conferen-
J. C. Henderson, rnnfereni-* e\snireiiNt i ,
i>i.-mi>et ..r .niai-i.-rij w e.t' ,nen tu w hom this was Intrusted were
K'hurt'b. (luihrle. c o Jones conference
evangelist. member of qunrte'ilv ronfeer-
tonce, MktsliomaiCIty; J I* Huffman, ,011-
ference evi ngellst m-mber Iinth&rt .-on-
vrence K K ll«Bl>->. mlssimuiry In
Arlsona Mward Hislop. .hanceilnr
Metlio.list unlversltv, mrml..-i „f tlUar.
lerly eoa#srence of Klrst . hui-rh liulhiite
Ostend Navy Works Bombed.
tendon -British forcef carried out
a bombardment of the naval works at
Ostend
Pow-sr Plant Wrecked.
Tacoma, Wash -The black powder
cording mill of the du Pont Powder
works, twenty miles south of Tacoma.
blew up All of the employes were
outside the building at Ihe titue and
no one was injured
I r
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Seger, Neatha H. The Geary Times (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 25, 1917, newspaper, October 25, 1917; Geary, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc183984/m1/2/?q=led+zeppelin: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.