The Weekly Democrat-Chief (Hobart, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 12, 1920 Page: 3 of 8
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tub weekly democrat-chief, hobart, oklahom a
Kl 11 Ml. Hi
BE TMED MMfflSI 9
JONES BIOS, DRUGGISTS
CHARGES AMERICAN | WILL NOT HAZARD I DEVASTATION AWES
GOT MILITARY MAPS: CENSUS ESTIMATE; AMERICAN TOURISTS
IMk t.G.1. Fr«. «ICH_Ypj)NG_JAPANraE Writ.r P.tat. Emotions ()F PARENTAGE AND CIT-
IZENSHIP—ONLY 23 STATES
KEEP VITAL STATISTICS
CAN YOO PROVE A
RI6HT TO SUFFRAGE
BIKTH RECORD BEST EVIDENCE
"GRANDMA" MURPHY DEAD
Mrs. Lucy F. Murphy, 76 years old,
mother of Prot. J as. D. Murphy ami
Mrs. John Swisher, died suddenly this I
Will Have Op-
portunity of Proving Inno-
ccncc Before Judge Edwards
For the purpase of trying
held
^ twTV.miTv Ham after >B county jail and unable to make
morning, at the family home, after . eh«-„u will
an illnesa lasting only a few minutes.
Funeral services will be conducted
from the family residence, 300 Hitch-
cock street, Sunday afternoon at 4
o'clock, by Rev. Roy Curtis.
r application ron a
JUDttMBRT VACATING A PART OK
pl.AT OP THIS ORIOIKAL* TOW* OK
sjvydkb. OKLAHOMA.
«-l-wktf
Notice Is hereby irlvcn by the under-
aliened. The Chickasha Cotton Oil Com-
puy. • corporation, the owner of the
whole of the real estate described sa
niock 42, Block 4*. and l-ots 1. I. S, 4.
5. «. II. 11 1*. and 14. of lllock 41. and
Lota 1. 2. J. and 14. of Block 44. of the
original Town of Snyder. In Kiowa
County. State of Oklahoma, will make
application to the District Court, In
that portion uf the original plpt or said
Town of 8nyder. aa Ilea Eut or tne
Might of Way of the St. l.ouls-8an
Francisco Railway Company and be-
tween the North line of lilocka 41 and
41 of said Town and the South line ot
Ulock* 43 and 44 of aaid Town. Includ-
ing the streets and alleys within such
territory; and that such application
will be based upon the grounds that
such portion of aald plat as la sought
to be vacated is not used <>r required
for town purposes, that such portion
of such plst has never been used for
town purposes, and thst the platted
streets and alleys across such portion
of such plst haa never been used by
the public, and that the public haa for
the public 1
put. And notice la hereby given tnat
such application to vacate such portion
of said plat will be made to said Court,
at Hobart. Oklahoma, on the flrat dsy
of the next session of said Court to os
held after the expiration of JO days
from the date of this notice, at the
hour of nine o'clock a. m.. or *o i
thereafter as such application can
hear*: and all that desire to resist sues
application may be present and have
hear lag at such time.
Dated this l th. day of May, 1*10.
■ ■ ha C
By
NOTICE
7-3*wkV.
Case No. 3211
IN THE DISTRICT COl'HT OF KIOWA
COOKTT. OKLAHOMA.
Frank w. Nelson. JK-latitl-
Hall-Baker Craln Co.. a corporation,
Chalfant N« l-on Grain Co.. a corpora-
Hon. J. D. Chalfant and
Cormlck and B. W. Nelson.
E. W. Mc-
pefendants
IN THE NAME OF THIS STATE OF
TI^Kabme*<iefen«1ants. Jr
C.raln Co., a corporation. Chalfant-Nel
«on Oraln Co.. a corporation. J. D. C nal
fant an.l E. W. McCurml.k will take
notice that they have been sued In the
above . ntitled cause of actl®a by the
plaintiff above nHim-d to •lulet th< title
to l ot Six («> In Block Thlrly-two (32)
|.| thf Or dinal Town of Hobart. State
of Oklahoma. County of Kiowa, and
that unless they answer the petition
of the said plaintiff Frank W. Nelson
on or before the 10th day ..f Sept. 1 *V.
the allegations of said petition aealnst
said. Hall-Haker Grain Co
t ion. dial fan t-Nelson Grain in., sl cor-
poration. J. D. Chalfant and k-W.Mc-
Cormlck. will be taken as tru< and
juclRmrnt rendered afsain t Raid dflfj'tid-
ants, their admmistrators. executors,
heirs, legatees or assigns, declaring all
their rlfcht. title or Interest In the
above described real estate
void and nuletlng the title ■" sal'J "V
estate In and to said plaintiff. I rank
WDone'this the 17th day of Vo"il l -'«
J. E. DENISON. Court Clerk.
Et'lTH BAXTEIt. Deputy^
E. V. UAKE8TUAW.
plaintiff.
Attorney for
«-Sw2t
pointed and qualified Executors of ths
fast will of Chrlatlan !*r*.
have rendered and presented *{
tlement and filed in raid cou/J thelr
final account and report of their ad
ministration and their f.?r
trlbutlon and •''"^"r^'A^fTth dav of
c-mors and that Wed the 26th. day or
Vticust A. P. 11*20, being a dsy of the
reanilar term of said Court, to-wlt: of
the July Term. A. D. l *«.at oclock
In thf* forenoon of Raid da*. at tn
Co„nty_ Court room In JIhe City of Ho-
bond. District Judge Edwards
convene court next Monday for the
hearing of four criminal cases.
George Dodd, charged with murder
Geo. E. Jones, alleged bigamist; Geo.
H. Boanick, for stealing an automo-
bile nnd Jack Kent for grand larceny
will be tried. Jones is temporarily
out on bond, buf hia bondsmen will
withdraw Monday, when the case ia
called for trial.
A large number of men have been
summoned by registered mail for
jury duty. They ore:
D. W. Bird, Snyder.
E. O. Sears, Snyder.
W. L. Beason, Snyder.
J. S. Bower, Snyder.
H. W. Bassett, Snyder.
C. E. Allen, Snyder.
V. M. Bower, Snyder.
A. E. Bentel, Hobart.
M. C. Turnbull, Hobart.
M. K. Fish, Hobart
P. E. Foltx, Hobart.
L. Koebelin, Hobart.
D. O. Browning, Hobart.
W. A. Dean, Hobart.
Sid Goodwin, Hobart
C. P. Lester, Gotebo.
D. A. Meadows, Gotebo.
R. R. Faulkner, Gotebo.
T. B. Donnell, Gotebo.
M. J. Allison, Gotebo.
Homer Baker, Gotebo.
W. T. Harris, Gotebo.
i. R. Bryan, Mtn. Park.
G. A. Burkhart, Mtn. Park.
T. P. Brannon, Mtn. Park.
E. A. Coulter, Roosevelt.
J. E. Gunn, Roosevelt
I* H. Jasper, Roosevelt
J. J. Walker, Roosevelt
G. M. Hargrove, Roosevelt
J. W. Bock, Roosevelt
Ellery Burdick, Roosevelt
C. H. Doyle, Roosevelt
L. C. Cheuvront Roosevelt
J. C. Scurlock, Roosevelt.
E. E. Autrey, Roosevelt
W. L. Parker, Sedan.
Earnest Cook, Sedan.
Robt. Fox, Sedan.
W. E. Jones, Sedan.
D. K. Gourley, Sedan.
W. A. Turner, Lone Wolf.
N. G. Rich, Lone Wolf.
R. G. Cogdill, Lone Wolf.
D. D. Clark, Lone Wofl.
W. E. Thompson, Lone Wolf.
R. Hanna, Lone Wolf.
J. J. Burnett, Lone Wolf.
Fred A. Hamilton, Lone Wolf.
J. T. Parks, Lone Wolf.
F. L. Osborne, Lone Wolf.
J. J. Jayroe, Lone Wolf.
E. L. Bolte, Lone Wolf.
C. L. VanDorne, Lone Wolf.
A. H. Parks, Lone Wolf.
J. C. Anderson, Lone Wolf.
M. E. Settle, Lone Wolf.
J. T. McMillan, Lone Wolf.
J. D. Copeland, Lone Wolf.
P. O. Conyers, Lone Wolf.
J. A. Dodd, Saddle Mountain.
J. S. Hogue, Carnegie.
L. Jones, Carter.
L. C. Atkins, Mtn. View.
H. B. Laird, Mtn. View.
J. R. Lindsay, Mtn. View.
Henry Higgins, Mtn. View.
A. E. Carstcn, Mtn. View.
C. L. Chapman, Mtn. View.
J. R. Anderson. Mtn. View.
J. W. Peeler, Mtn. View.
T. R Buchannon, Cooperton.
J. H. Davis, Cold Springs.
H. J. Slocum, Cold Springs.
E. E. Newton, Alden.
m#«Hiiiirnmn5 sirfr i umal'1 ma km an auikati.
FOR SELLING DATA ON 8IBEK- COMPARISON IMPOSSIBLE—IM-
IA—UNITE DSTATES ATTACHE
DENIES IMPLICATION
MIGRATION SHOWS LOSS
WASHINGTON. August 9—An
nouncement of the 1920 population of
the United States will be made about
By HENRY W. KENNEY
(United Press Staff Correspondent.)
TOKY,°^jU'y 10- <By MaiL)—The meanwhile" all e«ti-
arreat of Tsunanoru Oyama, a young .emi-official or otherwise, are
member of one of Japans very high-1^ MthoriMd by the census bureau,
est families on a charge of having sold
military maps to an American, who
of Soob of Visitors to Ruined
Shrines and Battlefields of
Europe
By HENRY WOOD
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
The right to vote one of many
important rights which may be dif-
ficult to prove without legal evidence.
Because a birth record is the best
in turn handed them over to "a cer-
tain embassy," as the vernacular press
PARIS, July 24. (By Mall.)—Here evidence of age, parentage and citi-
An*u« Director „r th. W. ''t*£llSiSlllJf?. iX
"It is next to impossible to give an
accurate estimate of the continental
on the French.
«[T, " : ■ accurate estimate oi uie continental |-- ---- . . of labor in a pamphlet recently is-
"1;' p®pul tion of th. United Sut b.- J™'«« '• .,S.'*•«" birth nsto-
sternation in official circles as well U8e of insufficient daU ami the un
aa with the public in general, Mugum, disturbances to our population
though the matter is at present veiled gjnce moMid steuart.
in the mints of official secrecy.
Young Oyama is a nephew of the
late Field Mashall Prince Oyama, one ^'but'ti^ census bureau does
tration as the first measure in
Children's Year follow-up program.
to learn just what effect the sight of
the French battlefields and devu.-;tat-
since 1910," .aid Steuart. I tf^ma.W' Only 23 States and the District of TT
| "Everybody believes the population1 ^ Columbia now keep birth reconl, with 183' 164 aBd 92 Pere#nt mfKtlVe"
in 1920 will be from 105 to 110 ^ cha)ong Saint MiMe, Verdun u^eient accuracy and completeness > . J ,
COST OF SICKNESS
NEARLY DOUBLES
HOSPITAL SUPPLIES ARE AMONG
THOSE TAKING A SKYWARD
TREND DURING LAST DECADE.
—ALCOHOL HARD TO OBTAIN
lly United Press.
NEW YORK, Aug. 9.-
supplies in New York City have in-
creased 63 percent during the last,
year, according to figures made pub*
lie by the Post-Graduate hospital hern
Twenty-five articles used in the hos-
pitals were found to have increased
this amount In ten years the in-
crease has been enormous.
In meats alone the boosts from 1910
to 1920 range from 86 percent, for
pork to 18:1 percent, for beef, with
mutton, lamb, and veal showing gains
of Japan;s foremost statemen of authoriie the estimate," Steuart de-
modern times and a member of the
dared.
Elder statesmen group, which is vir-, orfida|„ |n charK,
tually the ultimate power in the * . . . .
country. The young man is also a
of tabulating
inability
:,vS.h",wi.h 0~. I watched the,,
the Argonne, Champagne, ltheims to admit them to the U. S. birth re
and Soissons I K'stration area. 1 hese States are
"During those four days," Rogier Gali'ornia, Connecticut, Indiana,
declared to the United Press, "I lived Kan,a, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland.
Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota.
to ITI.ee Oyuu. the j,w nt d„„ the de|' "f6h . <>n,on.
«de th.t h.. P-l. They include ' * f think' I ^
Alcohol, tongue depressers, apri-
cots, cotton and X-ray plates all have
plunged into that race for supremacy
in the percentages of increased coat.
Alcohol is one of the most difficult
commodities to obtain and at the
same time one that a hospital cannot
do without Post-Graduate uses six
enemy. Wide in Siberia he Is sup- (,B a normal year> lfi4 there were
posed to have become friendly with 6 (K>0 death8 from this disease,
a certain American and to have dis-| factors are believed by offi-
posed of the maps to him, the null- cialll ^ ^ndered impossible an
tary attache of the American embassy C8timate based on comparative fig-
being, it is said, the ultimate recipi- ure&
ent of the maps. ■ _________
Several other /oung men have been
head of this great family, and his
that,, while no direct charge has been n-riod of the world war well as cur- "These Americans, especially the ^ isconsm. The> i-epresented, in ' ment control of the sale of alcohol
made against the American embassy. ^n™nt of ImmirTuon older ones, were very gay and their *>*■* P" «nt of population of the forW(1 the ho8pital on ^ to
the accounts of the affair take pains, Mor<> than" 4 000 000 immigrants gayety, rather boyish, if not childish c<>untr> ... . , I Pa>' 860 P*«*nt in excess of last year
to veil their allusions so thinly that' . wouij n..' _ e to thig at times, first grated on me and then Children now being born in the re- prices. The required application for
no room is left open to doubt as to ct.untrv from Europe did not enter shocked me. I would have preferred maining 25 States representing a'-. permission to purchase alcohol, tax
which embassy is referred to. |,h uljt-d states Murine the ten to meet them grave and already pre- most half of the population may t*,free, has been delayed on its way to
It is stated that the young man according to immigration sta-' P*red for the sorrowful proof to seriously embarrassed in not possess- in Washington and the hospiUl to
with the 14th cavalry regiment when Katies I which they were to be subjected. mg a birth certificate when the time Mtisfy its demands was required to
it seised Habarovsk in August, 1918,1 ADD'roxjmately 3.600 000 aliens left "But suddenly amongst the very comes to prove that they are okl I purchase a small quantity at the rate
as a member of a sun-eying detail,'th# country from 1910 to 1920 accord- first ruins, this gayety died, and it enough to go to school, to leave |of >«.20 a gallon, when the price at
and that at that time he secretly . ^ estimates. seemed to bury itself in the stones of school, to go to work, to vote, to mar-, the time, with the permit wa 86
took possession of about 250 maps) deaths due to influenza during the the overthrown villages. They no O'. They may have trouble in prov- cents a gallon.
which had been ih possession of the ^ epidemics toUlled nearly 500,000. longer laughed and no longer joked. lnK their title to inherited pr"pe^ Other articles included in the com-
u- <no 'Premies totaiiea neany ow.uw. frightful image of the war in the absence of proof of parentage,'moditie« which have joined in the
began to appear. It was there before mi their right to hold public office j prjce jump were thermometers, rub-
their eyes and no longer were they 01 receive passports for foreign trav- ^r gloves, dried vegetables, sugar,
able to turn their eyes away. «' ma>" be questioned if «v'™«ce of 1 tomatoes, glycerine, cotton, waste,
"They looked with frightened citiaenship furaished by a birth cer- „,bber throat bags .towels, paper nap-
glances at ihe disemboweled houses, tificate is lacking. kins, sheets, spreads, toilet soap, chip
at the demolished church towers, at1 The community also is handicapped oap, washing powder nnd cocaine,
the ruined churches, at the torn and in undertaking measures for the pro- Yet, despite the enormously increaa-
twisted iron work of former factories tection of life and health if it does Uj Cost of sickness, people continue to
wheat'erep of Kiowa county could be!at the riddled walls and all of the not have vital statistics based "" V sick. Post Graduate's patient at-
increased thousands of dollars, if we hideous skeletons of the war which satisfactory birth and jl^^rNords. ^ ^ald'VMC
birth n^-tr.^^ The pheno-|ten new consulting rooms are reqnir-
srrested as Oyama's accomplices, and
the authorities are now making n
thorough investigation of the affal
It is certain that c onsiderable import
nnee nttaches to the matter, as is evi-
l irom tne tact that uyma has
which handled the care claims that
it made absolutely sure of its ground
before tak'ng steps, owing to the high
connections of the young man.
On the other hand, it does not seem
quite plain why the American em-
DO YOU KNOW
Do you know that the value of the
grows By standarixing we} "Witin e*«m ~ ""j:- menUl'groVrthin "health visiting"of ed at once.|
me«, to til select strain of jean tourists ^pointed «jt babies in Eagla^toring the last Hve
wheat suited to our soil and everyone tance huge red spots *at eitner ^ to«t aUribuied to the Notification
grow that kind. If we did this. Kiowa out against the green verdue of hiU >f ^ of ,91B which made no-
county would soon be recognized as a r that reddened the grass or tn tification within 3 aays compulsory
leading wheat country, and we could . prairies burn.1 throughout the Kingdom.
demand a premium for wheat " Burned—burned—a village i>u Vigorous efforts for one year, de-
- • ,, Kanred is a hard winter wheat which Ul—Oh! Oh! Oh! neat claiea the Children's Bureau pam-
hn«8FV. or anv other embassy, should vieW„ from three to five bushels an "Their lips never cease<l to repea ^ woull) place every SUte in the
pay 40,000 yen wh:ch is alleged to be Mre than either Turkey or this trembling_ lamentation in ton Unjte<J sute8 Jn the birth regi«rtra-
the amount naid for the maps, for other Hard wheat varieties. It is the that intermixed their pity, their ^[ tjon area. i„ communities in which
nroduet of a single head selected in r0w, their indignation and their # ^n(><| )aw not sufficientl v
|! 0B from a variety.ot Russian wheat anger. . I enforced, a birth registration test is
that had been introduced into the Un- | "There are people whose , reccommeniled. In States where there
ited States sevcal years before by the tjes are suddenly arouse<l at mo- ^ ^(equate law, campaign- for
ti. S. Department of Agriculturre.. ments like the opening and shutting ^ legislation should be waged.
The superiority of Kanred over the'of (loor8 and there are others where hrneig
- • - —*—* ■ silent
hart. In said County
OBITUARY
r^ested Tn saVd c^tVte S w " I ho^ April'26. 1845 at Plattsburg. Mo,
for the sett
of said accounts, at I
In
Her maiden name was Lusy Francos
file "his" exception's" In wrltlna to the
n(>c„iini Rnd cont^ft Ram«*.
IN witness WHKRKOF. I IJackson.
hereunto srt my hand and she was marrie<l Februar>- IS, 1861
7- «,°. a. d. ^>10. th to John C. Murphy, of Ridgely. Mo.
•j ■ CARPENTBn. county JudBe. In 1873 the family made an extended
By ki.i.a WHITE. Deputy Court Clerk. Jtrip to the West and returning set
1 tied at Quenemo, Kansas, where they
~ 1 resided until 1903, when they moved
rortTV covrt op kiowa ] to Hobart.
cotmTV. STATK OK OKI.AHOM*. For n ^ "Grandma" Murphy
theWatter of Ih^.EstJte of W .1 g uf|efu, an<) Gloved mem
. ..... ''All that we had imagined was noth-
is superior to them in winter hardi-|" "With these Americans there was jn(f compare,i with this. Back in the
ness. earliness. of maturity, resistance'no cxuberance of gesture, no fracas gtates no onc knows; its impossible
to rust and vield. It has been grown of wor<1Si no extravagance of expres- tQ know Thig torn ground; these
In about 275 experimental tests and ion It waR only on their faces and burned fields; these stripped trees,
in ordinar>- fields by about 2.000 farm- in their eyes that I could read their Nothin(f lives. You feel death every-
ers in Kansas. With very few excep- inipre* ions and see the souls that re- where.'
♦ Ions it has proven very satisfactory? f|eete<j. Their silence translated ( ,But you ajs0 feel glorj-,' declar-
The farmers' Co-Operative Associ- their emotions and spoke more lourt- ^ an American officer, 'because it
for other hard wheat varieties. It is the that intermixed their pity, their
data regarding Siberia, particularly gr(H|uet of a single head selected in ] row> their indignation ami
as the American forces have with-
drawn from that region and should
therefore take no creat interest
therein. It therefore looks as if th-;
maps may be more important than >iib rar. _ ...
• - hcen e'ven out. other varieties of hard winter wheat ^ sensibilities remain like
The verrnenlnr press stated a f«w | has been proved beyond a doubt. It an,i vigilant servant.
days ago that the foreign office had
Heen requested to take steps to secure
*ie arrest of the militarv attache. I-
r-y^rv at Ihe foreign office, however.
elicited the information that no such
had been taken, and it was add-
ed that a diplomatic official are im-
mitr* from arrest, no such action ^ ™ „—
could be taken, unless the country in- ations jn this county are willing to )y than ^ th0ugh they had uttered wap here that France saved the world
vjl-ed consented thereto. The I'oreitrn 8hir< in some of this wheat for seed, ^ fno8t vehement cries. 1 An<i everything lives because Verdun
office officials were rather annoyed jf they think that you would like to „Ag vet the thought of death had ,R immortal.'
•hat anvthng had been given out at have, but you had better go and tell 1 ^ ^ borne in to them. It only .. haVen<t the heart,' cried one of
all about the affair. Thev stated that them that you would be glad to get them a8 they stood before the American women,' to walk on the
the American charge d'affaires had ©f the seed so they will feel jus- Woo<i and Romagne where Kroun<| that is the grave of so many
't- 27,000 graves lie dug in the shade of brave French. Come, let's go
The next time
you buy calomel
ask for
called on the foreirn minister and tified in getting
complained about the various state-
which had been made in the
press, and as a consequence
an in-
Alowo Snod-rass, £££•&
51 nted and I
and
J&I&t^ofaX^t..^,fnw ,'Ai- ways given freely of her Ume
onio Hnortarass. deceased has render-1 nerfty for other* even In her declin-
th. mnther o, nine eh,|.
A. V. 1120;
oe.nn day of the reruar term of
Court, to-wlt: of the JuJ T-ITi'ji
r> It. C. Murphv. of Chattanooga. Ten
Vs«rt.tVn o'clock,nVVe foJenoon of^ John Swisher ami James
of Kiow^'hSs Mttrphy, both of this place.
ppomted by the said court I Funeral services were
.Td'm.c' any person* I n -1 at 4 p. m. Sunday afternoon at the
terested in said estate may appear | residence at 300 Hitchcock street, b'
Rev. Roy Curtis, of
fllVhls exceptions In wrlllnit to the ac
W^itnrh'P *w'H rW-V
hereunto set my nrtH .Jl'
ssl of ss'd '*< ort, this Jnd. day of aua
list. A. n. t 20.
(SB/ l.l
J. S. C\nPENTET
riunty Jndae
Fort Worth
h"J*|Rev. Curtis. Is the son of a forme'
nartor of the Christain church hen
and an old friend of Mrs. Murphy's
Burial was made at the Hobart ceme-
tery.
vest!ration was made which brought
out that the gendarmerie had told the
story. . . .
The press stales that the authori-
ties are rather in a ouandary owing
to the fart that thev have no definite
information as to the er.act nature of
the maps, and upon their importance
depends in larre measure the severi-
ty of the punishment to be meted
•Vut "To secure that information is
-ltrost impossible." thus remarks the
N'chi N;ch:." as the maps are already
in the hands of the embassy concern-
ed."
This statement is to some extent
home out by a remark made to the
United Press by a war department
official who said that the authorities
vere still undecided as to whether
Ovnma should he charged with treas-
on or only with gross cheat. If the
•naps are of actual military value,
he former charge will be brougnt. but
t is thought possible that thev have
-nerelv been faked by young Oyama;
-\nd that he passed off a bunch
worthless data in exchange for a con-
iderable sum of money.
The military attache of the Ameri-
-nn embassv states that nothing
whatever is known about anv siich
ransaction either by him or by his
associates.
rtchlaftba Maad. Yoa can asaa Ml a
aahU. la*KocaUa« Effect Prlca We.
mitk i: t< cbeoitohb
the matter of the estate of feter|
V Kitr'ls. ti. -ea
•ed
All
i rsons ha< Tt.^ claims ncalnst
./ Karris, deceased, aie re.,tilr
.•d to t.res. til the same. « th th
rarv vcvohers to th" iindcrslgaej ad
roio'strntrl *. nl her place-of resldanee
• ti, .ininin View, Oklahoma
T. lberl Tolbert A «• ed. at lh*lr '*^ ,
office at llohart. Okliihoioa. w,thla
f. nr irenths t>r the date h.reof, or the |
11 be forever harred.
Anrii't 2 1*2^. . . .
MAY M. PAIir.lP. Adnilnitratrtx
MRS. REED OPERATED ON
Mrs. 1,. F. Reed wa« operated or
► ill" Woodrow Sanitariu-n yester
!>-, and is reported do'ng 'cely tr
Tta QriWM TM BtM RM ARM Ito
INDUSTRIAL COMPANIES
NEGOTIATE NEW LOANS
NEW YORK, Aug. Industrial
companies, In many inHtnnree*. made
new loans for the year, immediately
following the opening of th. Nr
,'ork stock exchange thin morning,
L. E. CHARLTON. County Agent ^ ^ U is a sacrilege to remain here, and
| "With slow steps, uncovered heads so to(rether we entered again our au-
The purified nnd refined
calomel tablets that an
ed and improved. Sold
Daly in ■—fad package*.
Price 35c.
•a- and pious gestures they entered as tomobiles and hurried away,
one enters a temple. On each cross
there was a name, the number of the
regiment, but sometimes only one
word:
" 'Unknown.'
"One of my companions pointed out
in the middle of the cemetery
IN YE OLDEN TIME
Hoop
S^n*hw of "^aris resting against a flagstaff
Tko from the top of which floated the
those who starg aml stripes worked into the
Iimt asked crown with different colored beads
the druggist wag the inscription which she trans-
fer, and in- )atea from French into English: 1
girted on . " 'The City of Montrouge, mar-
having, tho raine of the village of Torcy to the
genuine American soldiers who died for Lib-
Golden erty, Justice and Right"
Medical I " 'That is sweet—very sweet,' mur-
Diocovery mured the American tourists. i
put UP by I "One of them, a woman, continued:
T). Pierce over fifty year* 'It is very sweet for us to feel that
an) Draw has eh^ngad very France has not forgot our boys who
Xh ««. tbenlBut DrBjS w^n
in the center of young cypresses and
flowers where she exchanged a few
words with young American girls sit-
ting on the veranda, shook hands
hands and then returned to join her
standard today just as they win
"ireK Goldeo |WI«I
Discovery for the stomacn and
Wood cannot be surpassed by any rty
lemcdy today. 1 «i don't know any of the girls,"
1 Dr. Pierce B Favorite Prescnp- „he Kaia, 'but they are the guardians
Hon for weak women has never 'of the cemetery—all volunteers—they
been equalled for the distressing |,ve here all alone and I felt that I
complaints incident to woman- wanted to thank them on behalf of
all the women of the United States.' j
"These delicacies of the heart, these
touching acts, these" moving words I
1 found often during the course of the
pilgrimage as we stood before the ac-
cumulated ruins of villages or before
the nothingness of the ravaged coun-
try.
| "Rut it was tt Verdun th;\ tl^y
really had their vision of the -night
mare of war and of the dismay of
the earth.
| " 'Oh, we didnt know," they cried.
hood. What others
Peakyvillk. Ark.—"I have used
Dr.-Pierce's Unlden Medical Discovery
and also the 'Favorite Prescription'
with good results. I am now in better
health ibr.n I have been In two years.
I r. Pierce'i medicines are all they are
elanii d i . he."—Miw. Bessie Slaolb.
8, iHPt<'cent* |o Dr.Pierce'i Invalids'
I *al i < li ilUlo, N. Y., (or tnal pack*
i^aoH aay ol ti* inediducs.
THE SUN IS RISING ON A
A New Day for the Farmer
A day in which he shall be master
instead of servant. A day in which
he shall be respected and esteemed
in the measure of his usefulness, in-
stead ot being derided as an ignorant
tiller ol toe soil. A day in which he
will sit in the councils of the state in
proportion to the importance of his
work, and written across the face of
that rising sun is "Organization and
Co-Operation."
We are paying the highest price for
wheat, and making money.
Farmers* Co-Operative
Asssociation
The Business the rsrmers Built
0. W. TALLEY, Nui{er. Bibut, OUiknu
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The Weekly Democrat-Chief (Hobart, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 12, 1920, newspaper, August 12, 1920; Hobart, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc184273/m1/3/?q=Birth+of+a+Nation: accessed June 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.