The Ravia Herald. (Ravia, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 1, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 15, 1908 Page: 2 of 4
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THE RAVIA HERALD
Jog T Glam Editor and Pub
Entered the post-office at twilit Okla-
homa as second class mail !natter
Obituaries and Resolution" of Respect
of less than 75 words will be published
free For all mattef in excess of 75
words a charge of one cent per word
will de made Count your words and
remit with manuscript it- -
Subscription per Annum— 5100
Six 50
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 15 1908
SALUTATORY
In launching THE HERALD up-
on the journalistic waters of Ra-
via I have no apology to offer
the busiNess men and citizens of
the town and community wanted
a paper and I could see no rea-
son why their wish should not be
gratified especially With t h e
bright future ahead of Ravia and
a most excellent agricultural
country behind it to make a good
town Enterprise is what it takes
to delvelop a country and a pa-
per is what the people of that
country need to tell the outside
wdrld of its many advantages
and this is what THE HERALD
will try to do l to this end I ask
the hearty co-operation of every
citizen in and around Ravi&
To succeed we must all be hus-
tiers and no knockers so roll up
your sleeves and push pull and
- talk for Ravia and the Ravia
country and success will be ours
In politics when THE HERALD
takes a hand will be Democratic
- the old fashioned pure Jeffer-
sonian kind without bosses or
collars It is the only way to
have pure politics and honest men
in office
In conclusion I wish to state
that THE HERALD is here for the
moral and financial upbuilding of
Ravia and surrounding 'country
and will be found at all times
Nrorltinlykithis end To be of
beiefit to the people the paper
must have their moral and finan-
cial support -
Rery respectfully
JOE T GREEN
- A new saying of Christ lost
' to the world for thirteen centu-
ries has been given to-the world
by P Henry A Sanders of
the prof 141Iniversity of Michigan who
in translating some volumes of
-!-41ib1ical lore discovered in Egypt
L Frier of Detroit
who is a' student
' ---- ---4 collector The
1 "'?- 7: Z5i''':!7-21Cite:CO----6410' Pel'111' It
47445"ifr7'71 ' f- :'''4 'r-:l-ljnade lin-
-- (-414 !-- r :L'
t
' ' 4--16-d-- -30 l
' s to coin-
-- --''' -'1 "'"'11-11--Y 4 of God and
'':::s's i: f:'ri''-::1-this reason 're-
:--- 1: '-: ii
1 tteotirr ess now'
1
:-16':'-: Christ and Christ
' r -"'
s' ' '''' :' em 'The limit of the
lfd the power of Satan has
71H kfullIiied but other terrible
lings are at hand and I was de-
livered unto death on behalf of
those who sinned in order that
they may return to the truth and
sin no more to the end that they
may inherit the spiritual inde-
structable glory of righteousness
which is in Heaven"
1
The state demands the right to (
inspect the mines And what is I
more the people demand- the
right they be examined often
and rigidly The mine inspec- r
tion of too many places is one c
niade after some dozens or hun- f
dreds have been sent to eternity 8
Such inspection is worthless and (
the state of Oklahoma cannot be
too strict in this branch of ser-
vice Whoever seeks other than h
efficient and stringent service in 6
the department is far from a v
friend of the state or its people 13
The mine -horrors of the year a
1907 were terrible and they will a
be as bad always unless changed E
bY the state inspections the op-
etators made to nukke the mines
safe before allowed to operate 01
Had these precautions been used b
In the past years thousands of y
Women and children now strug- e
gling for existence - and a very u
meagre one too could be enjoy-
lag the advantage accruing
through the wage of the father
who now lies buried in the mines
--rGutihrie Leader - — ' Jo
-
A WOMAN'S
-
0 C3 C1 C1 C1Ni C3 C0 C3 4 13 0
-
J- Co -0-1100SE
110
V-
PO
I
pEALER IN EVERYTHING!
I
-- -
Will
0
0 A
0 C3 li 2
Ohio has instructed for Taft
for President '
Wednesday was Abraham Lin-
coln's birthday s lie was one of
America's greatest men
Ravia's future is indeed bright
Just keep pushing and hustling
and - it will be the best town in
Oklahoma
Ws rather a poor time to pity 11
the railroads and coal operators I'
very much They have not beer
so sorely oppressed as to be no-
ticible When Ave have to pay
eight dollars per - ton for coal
hauled less than a hundred miles
it does not seem as though pc
roads or the coal operators will
go to pieces very fast—Guthrie
Leader
This issue of THE HERALD was
printed under rather trying con
ditionsi and is not what it shOuld
be Our press and cOor mate-
rial was delayed selr- and tc
get the press and engine up an
in running order and got - up tht
"copy" and type alls in one
week was too much of an nil
dertaking-und has put - us a -day
late in getting to press ' besides'
not living us the time that we
should have ' had in preparing
COPT and getting ads
Our- exchanges will please drop
the name of the Itavia Gazette
from their exchange list and add
THE HERALD The Gazette ceas-
ed to be published last December
and that outfit except the press
re1vased by THE HERALD
t
0- i imnri uee an
Ausness to-date power pressigasoline en-1
7 -1 power
ib
gine type and other fixtures
giving Ravia an outfit that would
be a credit to a town many times
larger ' But Ravin will double
her population iii less than two
years
Ravia is to have another paper
Joe T Green who for the past
several months has been editing
the Graphic at Leonard Texas
is to start a paper there known
as the Ravia Herald Mr Green
leaves the Graphic in charge of
hiswife end son We bespeak
for Mr Green the hearty co-operation
of the people and WA-
ness men of Ravi& It takes the
co-operation of all to make a suc-
cess of-s- paper -16 well as all
other enterprises of a town—
Mannwitille News
rust Buster?
Hey—You I
Yes YOU'Ri - the (
man we mean
You're always talk- 4
ing about the harm the 4
trusts are doing The 4
country's going to the 1
demnition bowwows you
say because of the un
curbed trusts Rich grow-
ing richer poor getting
poorer Used to be that
a poor man could go into
business for himself in a
modest way and make a
good living Now he
must become a clerk ()KA
roustabout or a hodcar-
rier for some corpora-
tion–rename combination
- that has grown to be a
Goliath of bigness that
has devoured the fat of
the land and is still gour-
mandizing upon it till
there's' not a scrap of
bone left for the under -
)
That s your line of talk 'You're stilt ban ding it out
) --
you're p oud of it
now l et s see A YOU a t t e
Are rus bust r YOUR-
a-nd
' 0
SELF
t' - eit Mail Order Ste
-
! Did and ma: r ee n stalk up to the postoffice just nol
a letter with the ad re - fire
gni the Envelope I Hey ? Didn't we ?
k
v v )n t you know that the Mail Order Store is a trust—
Vi
- the most dangerous in the crowd' Don't youlnow
t r 4 secretly and silently and slyly closing the doors of
opporttinjty to the young men in country towns and small
' cities like ours I Don't you know that the Mail Order Trust
is collecting the patronage of town and country people by
—fhe mail route thereby cutting down the patronage of the
smaller merchant the local man who is trying to build up a -
m- odest independent antitrust business I
Hey! 1 I 1 '
Didn't that ever occur to you I
-
N B (which means note well) : Why don't you trade
- at home instead of helping to build up a truEt that hurts your
home place? -
4-4 atifA'rf1- 4
- 'oe?:t-21t-1
- V 1 p
14iio
r :
' --
"A 7111013111AND IPAILDONS Ytk TRIO 131ill
SION" '
the lady from iiew York aecond
py Harry If I had champagne I'd
open a bottle" ' -
"Happy Harry the road ageutr'
shouted all the men In chorus
"The same Ho meant to turn In
here but the sight of the young lady
scared him A modest and retiring
young man is Harry I didn't know
before that be could sing Ile have
to shelter in a gulch somewhere to-
night" The notes seemed to be echoing
aboutthe room yet and Boating out of
door and window to lose themselves
among the crags and peaks and storm
clouds and the girl sang in a voice
scarcely above a whisper:
i
Senator Gore - inkoduced the
following Concurrent Resolution'
in he Senate: "Resolved by the
Senate (the House of Represen-
tatives concurring) That the
Secretary of War be and lie is
hereby authorized and directed
to cause a survey to be made of
the Washita River Oklahoma
from the point of its confluence
with the- Red River to the town
of Mountain View in Kiowa
county Oklahoma with a view
if dredging cleaning out ind
widening the channel and to
submit a plan and estimate for
such improvements:"
Tee Much Collection
A Scottish gentleman paying a visit
to London was taken by his nephew to
a service in St Paurs cathedral He
had no xcqualutance whatever with
the liturgy of the Church of England
He picked up a prayer book and be-
came very much interested but as be
turned over the leaves his face be-
came clouded with a look of intense
anxiety He placed the prayer book
carefully down - looked cautiously
round picked 'up Ws bat and crept
uteattltliy-to the door5-11is nephew
followed him and said:
-
Are you Ill uncle? What Is the
matter?"
The uncle replied: "No Itut It Is
enough to make any man III to aee the
number of collections made In this
kirk r
"Collections!" said the nephew in
surprise "It there is any at all there
certainly won't be more than one"
"Well" said the uncle "they should
no mark so many in the book There's
naething but 'collect' and bits of
prayer then 'collect' and more prayers
and 'collect again - And says I to my
'If I bide here until all these col-
lections are ta'en I'll no have a hew-
bee in ma pocketr "—London Tit-Bits
How Indians Tan Dowel h
The skin dressing of the Indians
- I bosth buffalo ectewt azifl a is general-
ly very neautiful and soft They
stretch the skin either on a frame or
on the ground and after it has remain-
ed there for threeor four days with
the brains spread over the fleshy side
they grain it with a sort of ads or
chisel After the process of graining
though the skin is apparently beauti-
fully finished it passes through an-
other process—that of smoking For
this they hang the skin on a frame
in a smoke proof house or tent The
fire is made at the bottom out of rot-
ten wood which produces a strong and
peculiar smell The fire must be smoth-
ered to make the smoke The grained
skins munt be kept in the salmi' for
three or four days and after this the
skins will always remain the same
even after being wet which does not
belong to the dressed skins in civilized
countrles—"Life Amont le Indiana"'
The Partitions of Poland
There have been three partitions or
Poland The first was in 1772 when
Prussia took the palatinates of Mel-
berg Ponied and Warmht a part of
Cu Im and a part of Great Poland Aus
tria took lied Russia or Galicia a
part of Podolia Sandomir and Cracow
and Russia took White Russia with all
the part beyond the Dnieper The sec-
ond partition was in 1703 by which
Prussia acquired the remainder of
Great and a portion of Little Poland'
and the Russian boundary was ad-
vanced to the center of Lithuania and
Vothynia In the third and final par-
tition in 1795 Austria bad Cracow
with the country between the Mc&
and the Vistula Prussia had the cap-
ital with the territory as far as the
Niemen while the rest went to Russia
—New York American
aua Kula took White Husain wit
Hoir Wm H Murray has the part beyond the Dnieper The
made known his desire to be one ond partition was I ---- 17fLit
Prussia ac uired by w
of the delegates at large to the
is to be Great and aq portionthoet Lremittlaolupde
great convention that
n s
held in Denver in July His de-
and the Russia boundary wa
c'
sire shell be gratifielmar8hall vaneed to the center of Lithuania
Voihynia In the third and dual
County Democrat - - Mon in 1795 Auer m
bad G
gThe people should not send with the country be
prusswiaeenhatdhetheP
Mr Murray or any other office and the Vistula
Mal with the territory as far an
holder to Denver aw a delegate
to the National Democratic con Niemen while the rest went to Itts
sew York American
vention The pedple have doub-
A Dramatis Anther
ly honored Mr Murray already - e '
AAA most actor managers Macre
and he should he willing to step was pestered by would be dramatic
aside and let some other good til0re An ambitions young tel
Democrat go to Denver - brought him a dye act tragedy
" Monting to Drury Lees '
"My piece" modestly orphaned
author "is a chef d'oeuvile 1 will
Don't forget that The Herald itsiwr he
for its success for 1 have 4
office is in the hack end of the lie My tragedy l so
iniary th
taste of t :
bank -Call and see us and have
youy-loame enrolled aa a auscrib the characters are killed off at the
er The Herald is here-Nfor the of the third act
"With whom then" asked the tai
UPbUilding of Ravia and'n ager "do you carry on the action
your moral andlinancial an
IPP°rt ' tact ttwbeo atiltZs of Soso who d
Subscribe for the Herald and is the t r—CorshillMagasinA
send It to your friends abroad : -
b"""1--
1 ' -- -- Joh pri ing it The Herald
A Dramatis Anther
Like most actor managers Macready
wu pestered by would be dramatic au-
thors An ambitious young fellow
brought him a nye act tragedy one
morning to Drury Lane
"My piece" modestly orphaned the
author "is a chef d'oeuvile I will an-
swer for its success for I have con-
sulted the sanguinary taste of the pub
lie My tragedy Is so tragic that all
the characters ars killed off at the mid
of the third act"
"With whom then" asked the man-
ger "do you carry on the action of
titis last two acts?"
the ghosts of thoso who died
hi lb t r—Corchillyagasine
-
tn
-
-
- --o
fi
tj
Ii
4
DRYGOODS Booth' Shoes Caps Hats Groceries in fact everything you need
Just received a car of the famous BEN HUH FLOUR Every - sack guaranteed
We also have the best line of Tailor Made Clothing that can be had FIT guaran-
teed Come in and price our goods whether you want- to buy or not we will
treat you right
'
S
0
aMME111
0 3 C3 0
Maintaining His Argument -
One night at Brooks' when Coke ivas
present Fox In allusion to something
that had been said made a very dis-
paraging remark - about government
powder Adam attorney geniral to
the Prince of Wales who heard it con-
sidered it a personal reflection and
sent Fox a challenge At the time ap-
pointed Fox went out and took his sta-
tion standing full face to his adver-
sary Fitzgerald pointed out to him
that he ought to stand sideways
"What does it matter?" protested Fox
"I am as thick one way as the other!"
The signal to fire was given Adam
fired but Fox did not His seconds
greatly excited told hint that he must
fire be — if Vidor mid Fox
"I have no quarrel" Whereupon the
two adversaries advanced to–shake
hands "Adam" said Fox complacent-
ly "you'd have killed Ina It It hadn't
been for the badness of government
powder"--London Bell ma n
Eats °Km Alive
"Does this dog like strangersr
"Loves 'em ma'am"
"Well I must have a dog that does
not like strangers"
"As I was about to say ma'am
when you interrupted - me this dog
loves strangere an' Ida eaten several
of 'em ma'am Yes ma'am 'thank
your—Houston Post
Lingering Animosity
"Those two families in the adjoining
dgta who need to be at daggers drawn
have been reconciled haven't tboyr
9 don't know They profess friend-
ship but one family gave the little bat I
In the other a big toy drum and the
second family gave the drat one's old-
est boy a liddle"--Balthaere Amtrican
- Life is but a fleeting show but it is
nevertheleu the greatest show on
earth--Atchison Globe
Subscribe for The Herald
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11100MIZIPINS 11"-'
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4--c:-Z: fllassoc parcele it: 1 roliigeus'ittadlidll"1
:awrro11tys'berrer:::t—hregn:endst°mmiveanall cthimiloael":elpylletw"14alut:lodsittolthphiwswheletnoth:honaebst in
pitched In grem-dicimeha:
A colored man followed them
la:ugCdipwtyroseretopecrudoonnutginh:g eooksmoointht ‘ '
The Jim Crow mine had beeurisbut 1 tine
irmul ifteurirgtintingb
down for repairs' and tta engineer
I ly the engineer and his companions be-
cation His sister Olive had come me on
Frank Burton was free to take a Ta1 :n ha:
trout New York to Join him in the out Ten days
l had painted and the men were away
lug and young Taylor and Willmms 1 ono quiet afternoon When the ligi
were to snake up the quartet for a swinging lazily in her hamtllast aud
mountain camp - I looking up at the grim peaks felt a
When supper bad been eaten one feeling of awe and reverence stealing
night at AudYS stags house halfway over her tad softly sang: - -
on the Joureey to the PRO selected and ----' "Still all my song shall be ' -
while the night grew blacker and the I 'rrearr My God to qtr 0041
rain fell steadily all P m at in the roo ' blowy' 1"0Ytneaw
In
which was office bar- and smoking And lol From close beside her a
rootu combined voitte repeated the last two lines of the ''' - r
By and by the girl was asked to refrain and biOught 'he out of the
sing There were the grins mountains hammock andsillspon her feet in an 'la-
: - "-
shutting them in There were the black 5 tent -
a
night and the falling rain There was Leaning 'against tree scarce two
yards
the feeling at l distant she saw a east on 4 part that oungputinanhoist -
less than thirty with his
she was shut out from the world hand and a smile of apoioy on his
These things sobered her She felt the bronzed and handsome face He was
we of them and after a bit li be softly roughly dreetted and yet the garments -
sang:: 7' ' did not tit him III
Nearer my ma to thee nearer to thm "A thousand pardons for the Intro-
E'en though It be a rasa that ralseth me sloe" be said as be bowed low
gull all my gong shall he "You—you are the man who sang
Nearer my God to thee Nearer my 004 to thee Andy's and you are hurt" she sal
Nearer to thou" she took a step forward ' -
No one sang with her 'The hymn "Ouly a bit of an accident In
wait a gurprise to all 1
ven 1 0 herself or three o reeirikbanobwroken by a f
watt a gurprise to all
The last word87(1
from the sera a in
the open Igor and
Becoadrse In a tit
The last worlpfi'dying awaYithAZ
from the ver? In front thr
the open Igor and window tame the
oeconrse in a rich' deep roice'bt
tbutlyrnn which has made more wom
du weep and more mai reflect than
any other- written by human hand'
Every one looked up but )o one
moved band OK root - - -
When the singer lad finished they
heard a light step on the veranda the
creak or a saddle mid there was no
longer any one outside There were
only the darkness and the pouring
rain ' -
"My poor house is honored tonight"
said the landlord with a laugh "First
"still all my song shall be
Nearenmy God to thee
Nearer my God to thee
Nearer to thea" a
has held up more stagecoaches
than any other three men combined"
resumed the landlord as be looked
around with something like pride in
his face "Reeler daredevil but not
bad at heart- Got the birth and breed-
ing of it straight out toff Guam he
ain't in the business for money- but
out of recklessness Tou can gamble
that 1646's got a history back in the
east somewher"
"Then you don't call blin a real bad
maur waked 'the girl somewhat sot-
61011117 - - -
"Bless your heart Miss but could a
real bad man sing that there hymn
with the feeling he did? There wns
almost a soh in his throat as he fin-
ished and wild borses couldn't have
dragged him in bore to show bis feel-
lags They'll eatch or kill him sooner
or later and I for one shall be sorry
for - 6 -
-
rot' an hour the talk ran on about
the man who bad come atki gone so
mysteriouely and the girl was a anent
and sober liatener Th e wind had
risen to a gale and the door and win-
dow bed to be closed against the driv-
ing rain -
She was thinking of the 'loneliness
and discomfort of him they'talked-
of— of what be was and what be might
have been- Then when some one re-
marked the !atones of the hour Mee
Olive walked s to :the window and
-
-
Ifn Fargo of Dallas - Texas
National Bank Examiner was
in Ravia Saturday making an ex-
aminationf the first National
Dank Helseemed highly pleas-
ed with thS manner in which It
was comgleted during the panic
nomill as with its strong- finan-
'(al showing
-r
atronize our adverthiers
I
peered out We the night and sang
'gain: --- - -
IThere let the way appear steps ante
heaven
AU that thou aeadest me In mercy Myra
1 Angela to beckon met
Nearer my Get to that - -
Nearer my Owl: to hoe t -
Nearer to thee"
Next day the camp was pitched in a
feeling of awe agd reverence stealing
over her tad softly sang: all my moot shot' Is -
Neater my God to thee -
Nearer my Oad to Moo
' Nearer to thee" - ' j
And lol From close beside her a
volge repeated the last two lines of the
refrain and biOught 'be out of the
hammock andillipon her feet in en -instant
y -
Leaning 'against a tree scarce two
yards distant she saw a young man of
less than thirty with his cap in his
band and a smile of apology on bis
bronzed and handsome face He was
roughly dressed and yet the garments -
did not tit him
"A thousand pardons for the Intro-
sloe" be said as be bowed low
"You—you are the man who sang
Andy's and you are hurt" she sal
she took a step forward
"Only a bit of an accident In
or three ribs broken by a f
horse 01 know
the bi der there Is
U
p
'd
Id
ly
re
II
90
)t
the blf--661V-Ider there is
WIMted to lie up in there for a con
of weeks and give these ribs a chance
to mend Of course I did not know
you were here A thousand pardons '
I will go eleawbers" - - -
"No You shell go up there and 1--
will see that you are made comforta- -
hie The colored man shall bring you '
everything needful Go at once be-
fore some one comes Please gol"
The man smiled and bowed and took - -
his way up the hillside and Moses
N
s
coming up just then wit a supply -of
fuel wastold ot the st gees pm-
once and pledged to aid a t secrecy
A dank ot brandy was fill A bedding and food dung together an hello
things be carried up to the cave
An hour iater a sheriff's posse ar- - -
rived but they made no discoveries
The man they had been trailing for - 1
three days seemed to hive vanished oit
i
sic10
the face of the earth - - -
on the afternoon of the fifth day al 7
the men being away again t
climbed the hillside and
beside the bowlder itht‘
the cave she said to
who gave her greeting
his gratitude: - '
You must have had a I
mother brothers and elite
And then be 'Old her his
it to a human being- for the
It was the old old story--
college a stern father an
son harsh words the going I
home with a heart full of b
And row when you
she sLetelii his story
141114s14 '-c? st--40:atp- 1-1
IN !tvp- -4 -t 0) -
etc : y K i--: 3 : ' :opt
''74 '1-: j!-i :::t -1: 1
t'):32
:j 1:t i't':: it t
1i di4a:4i:-' i ' A
-Z-i 1 r
S t 44& '‘
sign a sign that pt-&:-
those who must still care y —to
honesty honor and respectability" ' )
II promised At midnight Ave nights '
later a terrible storm swept the mono
taltia and the valleys again There
was no sleep for any one in the camp
until the storm passed away and the 7
stars shone again
The last lingering raindrops were
falling upon her tent when a sound -
calmed the girl to rise from her conch' -
and part thwilaps ot bar tent and look
out From up the hillside where its -
clothing of lira still glistened with the -
wet came the words of the refrain: - - -
"Still all my song shall be -
Nearer my God to thee - Nearer my God to thee:
Nearer to thee" - '
"What is it Oily?" asked the broth'
er as he looked-out of his own tent
and his query was echoed by the young
men
j
The girl did not answer There were '
tears in t her eyes and a sob in her
throat Happy Harry was goimelk
away Hs had given her the promieed ie
alga He was going home to father
mother and sister and Abe-mountains
and valleys would know him no mon -
i
- Submarine Cables ' ' -
The very Ant suggestion that was --
ever -made about a submarine cable
was that made in the year 1795 by the '
Spaniard Salve before the Academy of
Sciences at Barcelona Two years later ' -'
'kiwi proposed to connect Barcelona
and the island of Majorca by a sub—
manis-Pavn Ur U MAW -
: marine telegraph line In 1808 Aldini
1 nephew of the celebrated Oak s
Isome interesting experiments
'transmission of electric signals under'C''"IN
the sea near Calais France In 1812
'Schilling ignited powder by electricity
transmitted through a submarine wire
under She Neva near St Petersburg
lobn Sharpe in 1813 tritnsulitted -
itric signal through seven miles of in- L
' sulated subaqueoue wire It was not s
till 1888 that it was demonstrated that
'submarine telegraphy was practicable
In 1848 Samuel Colt was operating sub
marine cables between New York city
Coney Island and Fire island In 1881
the first important submarine telegraph "
I was opened for business by a sompany
of French and Ifinglieb capitalists—
New rork American -
':--
-
Bevis Oil and Gas Company
b
The Ravia Oil and -Gas Corn -
pany have received their charter'
and expect to belytil 'oterations
16 the early spring Oil experts
from the Glenn Pool think we
are located rear the Center of
the great oil field thR surface
indication R sre tvery tigng that
could be desired - -
' -
ere is
there for a cou
hese ribs a chance
I did not know
thousand pardons -
- -
P -
Kk up there and I -
re made comforta- - --
an shall bring you
Go at once be-
e Please got" -
ad bowed and took --
Aside and Moses
I wit
Ns
a supply -of
Ili at gees pm-
o aid a 1 secrecy
was fill A lih:4edding
tether- -an hevia--
to the cave - 7
sheriff's posse ar- -
1de no discoverieti
I been trailing for -
o hive vanished olf
h
of the fifth day al
ay again t '
and
ithte
to c
tting
lad a 1
Id elite
her his
g for the
Id atm--
ather an
he "oink a
:P1
-
-
care y —to
spectability" ' )
duight Ave nights '
swept the mono: -
again There
one in the camp
4 away and the
raindrops were
when a sound 7
r from her conch- -
her tent and look -
Weide where its
listened with the -
the refrain:
rig shall ba' - -
to thee - -
I to thee:
-
asked the broth'
)f his own tent
oed by the young
wer There were
d a sob In her
rry was gointtlk -
her the promieed
!mum -to father
tLthe'lnoputains
w him no more
tables '
estion that was
iubmarine sable :
year 1796 by the
the Academy of
Two years later
onect Barcelona -
jorca by a Pub- - '
In 1803 Aldini
ed
triments
lo signals under
'ranee In 1813' :-
sir by electricity
submarine wire
Bt Petersburg
riinstilitted
Yen miles of
Ire It was not:'
monstrated that
was practicable -
Is operating sub - '
New York city
Island- In 1851
marine telegraph
a by a sompany '
oh capitalists—
s Company -
id Gas Corn
tbeir charter'
rn
'oberations --
P Oil experts
oi think we'
le center' of
th'e surface
rv th!ng that
'I
------ - --- '-7"--"--7-----7::
i
: : s'u7----4-----:--- 7 '
-
-
--- - - - '
- '
- d 1 - '- - -
-
- -- - - ' r4:: - - 1
- -
- -
-
Iwatt a gurprise to alle6
i ims- I woomolam CUM A— 1 le
- - - - Tile lass wont NtWO (lying a wa --- na --- I taf-edivider there is
from the 'oral& in front and thr 'I LIYIMteti to lie up in there for a
the opendde and window tame the of weeks and give these rib a
: Are I T -
secon4A'Zrse in a rich: deep voice14 to mend Of course I did no
ttytnn which ha mad more worn you were here A thsand p
i
You a Trust -Buster
du weep and mos e re mat rellett than I will 10 eleewhere" -
sybottall agreo neepadetheeere
oth:rn-e wlarietitgeend up
huu3au ba:::1 N ou
S: 7Every 11"seeirt°huat
moved band Or foot - - everything needful Go at o
- - Yes YOUR
: Hey—You I but '13 -- ble The colored man shall br
'
'E the h The man smiled and bowed a
4 t : creeNNaa'rlien a oritihigiehmaits siduregpe on he linthreelsrerbaedustsn b
was no fore come one comes Please g
no p the hillside and
hi
4 titte411tA)PL14'':-
man ve co
longer any one outside There were
You're always talk-
coming up just then wit a su
only the darkness and the pouring fuel wastold ot the st ger
s way u
77)1t3-:11: I l :
mg about the harm the rain once anti pledged to aid a t
A dank ot brandy was fill A
eo - Vi trusts are d said the landlord: with a laugh I Irst anti food dung together an
country's going to the t
ftrrICE 116
doing 'rite "Nly oor hewn I honored tonight
p s i"
things he carried up to the cave
--- 1'-- I demnition bowwows you 4 11110 An hour later a sheriff's in
T II 4p rived but they made no disc
ililtik
Tbe man they bad beeu trail
bay because of the un-
curbed trusta Rich grow- A
three days seemed to hive van!
richer poor getting :
l
o)
ing thoenfarcoheoat
fttehrlooeaurthoi the fifth
-
'
poorer Used to be that 16 II
the men being away again
"tik a poor man could go into
1111)14' ' IIII climbed the hillside and
SS for himself in a i 1 beside the bowider ithe
1111!it e bn Itiosdi nese t way and make a
"
: 10 l 1( 1 wtubooengrneyeshheersagireed ttoing
-141 good living Now he S4
idd his gratitude:
kb must become a
411 "You must have had a I
clerk ora
(ttl roustabout or a hodcar-
I ' rier for some corpora- I i : iik eit: 11111111 moAtnadertbberon thbeerstoladadbearhibteis
4 It to a human being- for the
-
-?
tion-rsesne -combination it was the old old story---
111 I N - that has grown to be a IP ' - id college a stern father an
t son harsh words the going iv
A I ' "25:-:r ' ':-- - - Cloliath of bigness that -
71-'1--4 1 home with heart full of b A ' -f j has devoured the fat of -14' 74 Aliti row when you
- I -yrk 1 4
mt the envelope? Hey ?
Didn't we?
W- 411"':1tes 141 4-14 7171'4011V' '-'-'1-
: : Ifr :1! t : ' ' m thaenidainzdinagnduisposntillit!otuuti : : s!::! 1 - (5:7:1-E14-r:r11h417t10703
'- ---' ?4 - 1! :
-- - - $1 ioo11 not a scrap of t ' s --s - -tsnt- there's' 414 -- -lc 4 r:01 4 44 !- t
bone left for the under - ---":4': -'-'"'' It' T Y' ' ''" y t '-
- : I )' Lrd 41 o "" -'-:4
'44'olv
: : - dog - 1
-1P14 rk i ii - - 0" N y 111
That s your line of talk You're stilt handing it out and -e- - "s'- --"- -'1 :
- 4- -
Jikaza is- 4 y '‘ g t - g 0 '
you're p °int of it-
so sit ''si-'T '1- vs '7 '" "-T' :1' 1
Wel now let's sie: Are YOU a trust buster YOUR aoyll s3ks Lsr- 7 191 i-1t::t41'1--
-
SELF
ins al:6-41- i-'' ' -'
ffice 1st no " -
A gN tragDOna g Ti nrran-
' lettereeweith tub te3tlaadkr:13 luos sign a sign that jih-rtt-
those who must still care
z' Didr to the
-elre he lady from New York eeeeed nal) honesty honor and res tab!!
I -: and mai
a
' cirMt°ail Orjder Ste' TOUSAD t :
py Harry If I bad citantiminte l'u promised At midnight it
l
°Pee a hettle" " - ' ' iota'later s terrible storm swept tl
4
c )n t yoU know that the Mail Order Store is a trust—
' '
: sh:ouvhntedar:PeaYallmitiaerrymneen' 'it:actor:rut taugrue u tird' --- - --: -
no sleep for any one in t
tuailltn: tabrettho e valleys saran
0 e'
Wall
t the most dangerous in the crowd'? Don't youlnow
4 secretly and silently and sly closing the doors here but the sight of the young lady stallshe aas 7
t r passed ewe
slyly ors o
- opportlfhity to the young men in country towns and small :aurseared whiama leAltainrryodestl aduiddlareatiarelnwg
last
falling upon l her tent mwihnedaro
before that be could sing Ile have
' cities like ours? Don't you know that the Mail Order Trust
caused the girl to rise from h
- is collecting the patronage of town and country people by to shelter ta a gulch somewhere to-
--The mail route thereby cutting down the patronage of the !tight"
t er
The notes seemed to be echoing out From up the hillside v
and part the-nape o b tent
smaller merchant the local man who is trying to build up a
clothing of firs still glistened
about the room yet and Boating out oi
gintdheweraindaeowandto pel akelahae
modest independent 7 antitrust business I
"glIll all my Wag Shalt 1
Wet came the words of the ref
A"'
'Icy!
I I 1 da oil
dinleetolvr: Nearer my God to thee
Didn't that ever occur to you? clouds and the girl sang in a yoke Nearer my God to the
scarcely above a whisper: Nearer to thee"
N B (which means note well): Why don't you trade
"Still all my song shall be "What is it Oily?" asked 0
h instead of helping te build up a trust that hurts your Nearer my God to num or as he looked-out of his o
- at home
home place f - Nearer mtr God to thee - and ti
his query was echoed by
Nearer to thee"
men
t "Ile has held up more stagecoaches The gip did not answer Th
than any other three men combined" tears in her eyes and a Bob
resumed the landlord as be looked throat ssnn str -
'
'
er ualicia a cow sox a cualteuge ax TOO TIM° SP y
more the people demand the c
ICN6
-- part --- aunsim6 of Podolia Sandomir and Cracow Pointed Fox went out and took his eta-
- 7-----7 ---- ---—' and Russia took White ussia with all tiou etanding full face to his adver-
and r
right they be examined often Hort Wm H Murray nas the part beyond the Re Dnieper The sec- Barr Fitzgerald igidly The mine inspec- made known his desire to be one raid poinjed out to him
ond partition was in 1703 by which that he ought to stand sideways 114
tion of too many places is one Of the delegates at large to the I Prussia acquired the remainder of "What does it matterr protested Fox he
Made after some dozens or hun- VT At convention that is to be Great and a portion of Little Poland' 'I am as thick one way as the other'
held -rd- in Denver in July His del
dteas have been Sent to eternity sire shall be gratified—Marshall and the Russian boundary was ad The signal to fire was given Adam sh
C
vanced to the center of Lithuania and fired but Fox did not Ills seconds
uch inspecton is worthless and Count at in
Voihynia In the third and dual par- greatly excited told him that be must se
the state of Oklahoma can i - -
y Mon in 1795 Austria had Cracow tire 'll be — If I Idol' said Fox es
too
not be gThe people should "I
not send with e country between the Mc& "I have no quarrel" Whereupon Um
strict in this b th
ranch of ser- Mr Murray or any other officel and the Vistula Prussia had the cap- two adversarie! sadvan eomcedto—nhankte 1
vice Whoever seeks other than holder to Denver as a delegate Ni41mewnittrntilo territory
t waeau:::11:Lestiche 1 b "d Adhit:111-1 klillied idt I Fox ne If litillahadn't as
efficient and stringent service in to the National Democratic Con- —New York American been for the badness -cof government
-h
the department is far from a vention min TheP0dPle have doub
A Dramatis Anther powder"—LondowBeliman
-
friend of the state or its people ly honored Mr Murray already - tikt t et Li gem m ' - —
The e orrors of the " ear and he should be willing to step man pesillit:ed a by ar would be dramaactic at - --------
be -
1907 were terrible and they will aside and let some other good thara An ambitious young fellow — — Bug
as bad alwayt unless changed De rat go to Denver - braught him Drury L a fiva ane act tragedy au° A - mor ' )-
14 the state inspect the 1 morning to
- -iv el
who died la t Cat
o "My piece" modestly explained the al
eistors made to nukke th mines Don't forget-that The Herald "is a chef d'oeuvile I will an- -4 )
Bee bef e ore allowed to opere '
- author ' Prattle
te offi ce is in the back d f he ewer for its success for I hay cow s Red
u the sanguinary taste of the pub-
Had these precautions been aid en i)
WA0011
U Ntk -Call and see us and have lie mY trilled?' so trillie that all
in the past years u
thousands of your tied the characters ars killed OD the end '' - () lemeemesi Coe
Women and children now strug- mime "Iv as a lilac rib- et the third act at - -ab
-
er The Herald is here the With whom then" asked the man- I 4 t I Possum
gling for existence - and a very
I ) I prib TX
17 upbuilding of Ravia and: il &ger "do you carry n the action of o ' ' I
lag the advantage
meagre one too could be enjoy
last two acts?' 4
accruing your moml omdfinancial sUpport the ghosts of those 1 alogue 11
through the wage of the father ' -------- -
who now lies buried in the mines Subscribe for thd Herald and In the t r—Corablityagazin&
— - ----J moo AMIN ItY D
TA
—Guthrie Leader - sentit to your friends abroad ' :: amwb"""1 FOR Y OU - 1661"
i I - -- - - I - ' 1 - te -- - i - -- Job pri Ing at The Herald :"'llalinll POI
I -
-
' - - - ---
ohne ell-
ixtures
it would
ly times
double
an two
rpaper I
le past I
editing
Texas
known
Green I
arge of
lesPeak 1
busi
kes the
a RUC-
I as all I
DW11— (
n n s : u
1
7 Co nOOSER
4 -
11 -ti:
J
‘
-
- -
a -
- ' DRYGOODS Booth' Shoes Caps Hats Groceries in' fact everything you need
0
Just received a car of the famous BEN HUR FLOUR Every sack guaranteed
We also have the best line of Tailor Made Clothing that can be had FIT guaran- -
- teed Come in and price our goods whether you want- to buy or not we will - I -
I
a treat you right
-
- - 2
I
I
I
'
-
'
'N
d
ww o -
o t
s
111
0
— -
A HERALD 0 C:3 11 C0 C) 151 LP
Editor and Pub 0
Ake at Itavta Okla- n n IriiitY OtiMAN9S
t A -
s
01
i'vl :
:0!
t:-
1-1:e': ' t' :::tr4
e-1-1-t!is
'11141'll''''-'
i::ti''' '::! 1:4
1 -t4p7tt4 A
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Green, Joe T. The Ravia Herald. (Ravia, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 1, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 15, 1908, newspaper, February 15, 1908; Ravia, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1916795/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.