The Hollis Post--Herald (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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CULTIVATORS OF ALL KINDS
Riding Cultivators.
We have all styles of Gang
and Walking Cultivators:-in
fact any thing in the Cultiva-
tor line you could need or
want—we can furnish you.
Come in let us show you.
Our Line of Lister Cultivators
was never more complete. Our Ball
Bearing "do Devil" will give you the best
of reaulU. We also have complete line of
Wooden Boxing Sled Cultivators.
House Cleaning Time Is Here.
The time of the year has come when every body needs new Mat-
ting and a few new pieces of Furniture, and our line is com-
plete.
We carry a complete line of Undertakers Supplies and are at your
service day or night. Residence Phone 81 and 43. Business Phone 28.
Coley & Barnard,
Hollis, Okla.
The Hollis I. 0. O. F lodge cel-
ebrated the ninety-first anniver-
sary of the organization of thai
institution last Tuesday. Quite
a number of visiting members
from various parts of the county
•Were in attendance.
A most interesting program
had been arranged which was
well rendered and enjoyed by all
present.
The supper, which was served
by the Rebekshs from six to
nine, was & most decided success.
It was the most instructive
and enjoyable in the history, uf
the lodge in Hollis.
attorney fee. twenty-live dollars costs of pros-
ecuting sutt and $2:> a month alimony.
Defendant must answer tnc petition filed by
plaintiff on or before the 9th. day of June or
said petition will be tak^u as trim and judg-
ment rendered accordingly.
E. F. Davis.
Apr 38 3t cltrk'
W. W. uriffln, Att'y for plaintiff.
Notice.
In the District Court for the l«h Judicial
District, sitting In and for Harmon County
Oklahoma.
Amended Summons
Dook Long, plaintiff.
TS.
Johnny Treacwell. Jim
Brock. Millie Dent Tolly
Brock. Henry Brock.
Joe Broek, and Maudle
Brock and Joshua Brook.
guardian of Tolly Uroetf.
Henry Brock. Joe Brock.
and Maudle Brock, heirs
o! Fanny Long, deceased, defendants.
Said defendants, johnny Tread well. Jim
Brock. Millie Dent. Tolly Brock. Henr> Brock.
Jo# Brock and Maudle Brock and Joshua
Brook, guardian of ToUy Brock. Henry Brock.
Joe Brock and Maudle Brock, heirs of Fanny
Umg deceased, will take notice that the
plaintiff. Dook Long, did on the 3rd. day of
March. 1910. ttle his petition In the District
Court of Harmon County. Stale of Oklahoma,
to perfect and culet title It the following de-
scribed lands situated in Harmon County.
°¥STw. 1-4 of the N. E. 1-1 and the N. E
1-4 of the N W. l- and the 9. E 14 of the N
W. 1-4 of section *9 and the S. W. 1-4 of the S.
K 1-4 of section*). aU In township 3 north of
range 84 west of Indian Meridian containing
lft) acres more or less and for such other re-
lief as may be proper and the said defendants
must answer the petition of plaiutiff herein on
or before the 9th day of Jum- 1910. or said
petition will be taken as true nnd judgment in
Mid action rendered addordlngly
E F. Davis.
AprM u clerk District Clerk.
W. W.Uriflln. Att'y for plaintiff
■in the Distnct Court for the 18th Judicial
District, sitting in aDd for Harmon County
Pene.ope Klnne. plaintiff
High School Notes.
.Eula Tice is back again as well
as eyer, and the second year
high school thinks she looks a
great deal better, but it may be
that this is due to the fact tnat
they are so glad to see her back
in their class; but they rather
think it is her new. pink diess
she is wearing. Albert is also
absent this week on account oi
mtimps, and we are wondering
whether he wi'u follow the exam-
p e of his sister aud come bad
next Monday arrayed in a new
apparel.
The first year high school ha>
lost from their grade, Ethel Vile*
who has gone to Alabama ano
intends going to Cuba before
returning home.
Clyde Alexander is abseni
[from the first year high school
this week on account of sickness.
Ora Abernathy, Eula Tice ano
Myrtle Terry were absent Tues-
day evening to read for the Odo
Fellows Lodgp, that is celeorat
ing its ninetieth anniversary.
Mr. Jobe is expecting to go to
Oklahoma City Friday and will
not return until next week. Af-
ter returns the second year high
school will take up Arithmetic
to review in place of their Physi
cat Geography.
A. G. Bowles, Superintendent
of the school at Francis, Okla..
for the past t wo years, ana was
offered the same plaee again for
the ensuing term with a raise of
wages, but be refused the posi-
tion to accept one here. Mr.
• Hnwles is a graduate "rom the
Caleb M. Klnne. defendant nowifsws r
s*iddefendant caiebm Kinne win tawejntral State Normal. Edmond,
aotle* that he fcas fieen sued in the .w e <Jklallom8 anJ COOieS tO US rec
B*imdC£un by Peoalope Klnne for an abso V R, ,,W , , .
iut*divorce and that Aie peuiionof me piam- ommemted as hiving always been
. •_ a A,... _• . %)th dar of ! - • s I mm.
A. and was sent as delegate
from the school to the Students
Volunteer Movement in Nash-
ville, Tenn , 1906 and to Louisana
... 1907. He represented his
school in several debates with
various leading state schools and
possessing these qualifications,
we hope he will do as much to-
ward building up the school as
our present superintendent has
don<\
Ora—"Do you- think my new
blue polka dot dress is pretty,
Mr. Shook."
Mr. Shook—"Very pretty in
leed, but I would have liked red
etter, because our geometry
bindings are that color. ''
On Friday, May the sixth, at
hree o'clock in the afternoon,
ii members of the second yea1
ugh school debate on ' Rosolv
d that woman suffrage shoulo
e prohited." This is their ver>
.a art nnhllP. dphatilDflf.
IHV m* viw . . ^
tiff was filed • sa* Court on the S*b dav of leading students In
1909 and prays for a decree of di-
eorce on the' grouDd of craeit> con support that School life Was for three
and desertion—the care ai4 custody of the president of tie Y. M. C.
two children of sstd ■fcrriage Any dollar. .***«
irst attempt in public debating,
ut they urgently request tht
>resence of any who are either
.uterested iu the question or the
lebatora.
Killing ia Coll,ipwortli County
Bud Riopetoe shot and in
uantly killed Ernest Gay den in
Collingsworth County Wed-
nesday. There seems, to have
been bad blood between the two
men for some time caused by
A dispute in regard to a fence.
They met in Wellington Tues-
day and camo to blows. The
following day, Gayden in com-
piny with his brother and
another party, passed the home
of Uippetoe and the quarrel was
renewed leiding up to the
killing.
The sheriff brought the pris-
oner to Hollis insisting on leav-
ing him here for safe keeping,
fearing mob violence. Haying
nothing but a small temporary
bluiding which is insecure,
Sheriff Nance refold to receive
him.
Both Rippetoe and Gayden
are well krown in this commu-
nity where they have many
friends wno deplore *ne killing.
ABLE TO ENDURE MUCH COLD,
•ems Microbes Are Killed Only by
966 Degrees Below Zero.
The extremes of heat and cold at
which life can exist have much great
er range than would be expected. For
■ome animals the greatest heat that
can be endured is 105 degrees, while
life, as we commonly understand it,
cannot endure beyond 130 degrees, at
which temperature albumeu coagu-
lates.
But there are certain forms of life
that can stand much more heat. Some
mollusks are not incommoded until
120 degrees is reached, while the lar-
vae of flies will endure 156 degrees.
Iand certain kinds of worms are not
killed until a temperature of ITS de-
grees is reached.
As to cold, it might almost be said
that no cold is great enough to de
•troy all traces of life; certainly no
natural cold is great enough; It is only
by the extreme cold produced by ar-
tificial means that all life is ended.
For frogs the limit is 18 below zero,
(Or myriapods 58 below, for snails 184
below, a greater cold than is produced
by nature.
But the greatest cold registers are
the bacteria. The germs of the plague
have kept their vitality for several
months in a temperature of 24 below;
those of diphtheria have remained
alive after being immersed for an
hour in a refrigerating solution at 76
below.
The greatest cold sustained is by
the germs of tuberculosis, which are
not affected by 148 below, and suc-
cumb only to cold represented by 256
below zero.
MONARCHY'S HOLD ON NATIONS
Republican Movement Practically Ex-
tinct In Europe.
Nothing Is more remarkable in the
last quarter of a century than the re-
vival of monarchy. There was once
a strong republican movement in Eng-
land. It is exUnct. In Italy repub-
licanism was a religion. It Is now
merely the shibboleth of a party.
Spain tried a republic and abandoned
it. The simultaneous assassination of
the king and crown prince of Portugal
consolidated instead of shattering the
dynasty. When the most republican
of northern nations severed its con
nection with the Swedish crown, the
Norwegians Immediately created a new
monarchy. Not even the influence of
the students trained in the American
college on the Bosporus could give the
republic a chance in Bulgaria The
glories of ancient Hellas could not In
dace the modern Greeks to restore the
republic The present generation has
crowned new kings in Servla and In
Jtouiaaiiia Russian revolutionists are
toUrabU radical but no serious uart} {
anil no sane polltlciatf has proposed
to reulace the autocracy bv a reuub-
lican president. Outside -Europe the
ancient monarchy of Japan has proved
In victory what the imperial throne of
China has proved in defeat, the utili-
ty of the monarchical principle. Out-
side the American hemisphere, there
are to-day only two republics of note,
the ancient confederacy of the Swiss
cantons and the not yet 40-year-old
French republic.—Appleton's.
WHEREIN LIES REAL SNOBBERY.
American Writer Takes Distinct Issue
with English Author.
"I know,'' said Mr. Anthony Hope
Hawkins, recently, "it needs a good
deal of courage to stand up in a cul
tivated audience and confess you havs
never read through—riglit through—
•Paradise Lost.' " But all good people
ought to be brave enough to stand up
and make such confession. Conceal-
ment in such a case the author of the
"Prisoner of Zenda" considers "exas
perating literary snobbishness." This
Is a mistake which others than An-
thony Hope have made and will go on
making: that people, nowadays, are
ashamed of confessing that they have
never read "Paradise Lost," "The
Vicar of Wakefield" and "Culture and
Anarchy." As a matter of fact, up-
to-date literary snobbishness consists
in boasting one's ignorance of Milton.
Goldsmith and Matthew Arnold. In
"literary" circles it is other gods that
reign. It Is Henley of whom one
must have pagefuls by heart, Swin-
burne that is (juoted by romantic wood
fires at studio teas, Wilde's "Picture
of Dorian Grey" that holds high place
In fiction. It Is the proper thing now
to attach one's self to new and rather
small writers. They alone know the
"modern" heart. To confess that one
has read through "Paradise Lost"
would be almost as bad as saying one
liked Dickens and Thackeray.—New
York Evening Post.
AT WORK WITH BROKEN SPINE.
Man Who Defies All Accepted Laws
of Medicine.
A man who. according to all the ac-
cepted laws of medicine, should have
been dead six months ago, has been
presented to the students of the Got
tingen I'niverslty hospital In May
last he fractured his spine in a fall
in.l was taken to the hospital, where
although his case was considered hope
kiss, an operation was decided upon.
Accordingly the bones of the verte
br..I column were reunited with alum
Inum wite and the affected pert
straightened with a tut f of the same
metal As. however, the slightest
shock would have been fatal to the
patient, he was placed In a specially
constructed bath and kent lrtne i*
water for four months, at the end of
which the injury had sufficiently
healed to allow of his being removed
to an ordinary bed.
A metal bandage was placed about
his body, rendering movement impos-
sible, but after another two months
the patient, with the aid of a metal
waistcoat, was able to walk. He Is
now able to do light work, and so long
as he wears his "armor" and escapes
another fall or similar burt is expected
4> l|VA.
The Arsenal of a Czar.
The best armed' monarch in Europe
to-day is the new czar, Ferdinand of
Bulgaria. His bedroom is filled with
weapons, which are not there for any
ornamental purposes, but for use. The
sinister collection includes guns, re
volvers, daggers and here and there
op chairs are cudgels and knuckle
dusters. A small and wicked-looking
revolver with all Its chambers loaded
lies at the head of his bed. Though
he takes all these precautions Ferdi-
nand Is a courageous man, but he suf-
fers at night from a constant dread of
assassination. A few weeks ago the
palace at Sofia was awakened at the
dead of night by a pistol shot ringing
out in the stillness. No one ever heard
what it was all about, but the ahot
was probably fired off by the prince la
% fit of nervousness.
A Public Park That Pays.
It is a bit astonishing to learn from
an official source that the most fa-
mous, extensive and beautiful munici-
pal park In the world yields a larger
revenue In money to the city in which
it Is located than the cost of main-
taining it. It cost the city of Paris
$142,000 to care for the Bols de Bou-
logne last year, and the revenue from
the rental of the numerooa pavilions
in the park, where all Paris takes tea
and dines in summer, was flM,000.
The expediency of thus making a
great public park yield a large reve.
nue from private concessions may be
•pen to question, hut so long as they
add to the attractions of the park they
are quite permissible from the public
viewpoint. The particularly notable
thing about this showing Is that the
total expense o! maintaining this beau-
tiful park, which contains 2,250 acre*
if only 1142,000.
Such Things Do Happtn.
Gertie—My, but yon got through
phoning quick!
Goldle—There waant any tun In
draggln' It out. There wasn't anybody
waltin'.—Kansas City Times.
The Dlffsmiss.
A Ifrui s^-DlvHinr*- what, y«T have
wtth yohr fellow man.
Socialism—Making your Miow man
divide with you.—Detroit NewsTtlb
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Roberts, Luther. The Hollis Post--Herald (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1910, newspaper, April 28, 1910; Hollis, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc185535/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.