The Sunlight (Carmen, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 30, 1915 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Socialist Newspapers and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THE RUNIIGHT CARMEN OKLAHOMA
WILSON SENDS ANOTHER
WARNING TO GERMANY
V) S WILL CONTEND FOR FREE-
DOM OF THE SEAS AT
ANY COST
REPETITION OF CERTAIN
ACTS WILL BE CONSIDERED
DELIBERATELY UNFRIENDLY
"Illegal and Inhuman Acts Are Mani-
festly Indefensible when they De-
prive Neutrals of Their Acknowl-
edged Rights Particularly When
They Violate the Right to Life
Itself"
Following is the official text of the
latest American note to Germany re-
garding submarine warfare:
"The Secretary of State to Ambas-
sador Gerard :
“Department of State Washington
July 21 1915
“You are instructed to deliver text-
ually the following note to the min-
ister for foreign affairs:
“The note of the Imperial German
Government dated the 8th of July
1915 has received the careful consid-
eration of the government of the Unit-
ed States and it regrets to be obliged
to say that It has found it very un-
satisfactory because it fails to meet
the real differences between the two
governments and indicates no way in
which the accepted principles of law'
and humanity may be applied In the
grave matter in controversy but pro-
poses on the contrary arrangements
for a partial suspension of these prin-
ciples which virtually set them aside
“The government of the United
States notes with satisfaction that
the Imperial Government recognizes
without reservation the validity of the
principles insisted in the several com-
munications which this government
Itas addressed to the Imperial Govern-
ment with regard to its announcement
of a war zone and the use of submar-
ines against merchant men on the
high seas — the prinicple that the high
seas are free that the character of
the cargo of a merchantman must
first be ascertained before sbe can
be lawfully seized or destroyed and
that the lives of non-combatants may
in no case be put in jeopardy unless
the vessel resists or seeks to escape
after being summoned to submit to ex-
amination for a belligerent act of re-
taliation is per se an act beyond the
law and the defense of an act as re-
taliatory is an admission that it is il-
legal “The government of the United
States is how'ever keenly disappoint-
ed to find that the Imperial German
Government regards itself as in large
degree exempt from the obligation to
observe these principles even where
neutral vessels are concerned by what
It believes the policy and practice of
the government of Great Britain to
be in the present war with regard to
neutral commerce The Imperial Ger-
man Government w'ill readily under-
stand that the government of the
United States cannot discuss the pol-
icy of the government of Great Britain
w'ith regard to neutral trade except
with that government itself and that
it must regard the conduct of other
belligerent governments as irrelevant
to any discussion with the Imperial
German Government of what this gov-
ernment regards as grave and unjus-
tifiable violations of the rights of
American citizens by German naval
commanders Illegal and inhuman
acts however Justifiable they may be
thought to be against an enemy who
is believed to have acted in contra-
vention of law and humanity are man-
ifestly indefensible when they deprive
neutrals of their acknowledged rights
particularly when they violate the
right to life itself If a bell'gerent
cannot retaliate against an enemy
without injuring the lives of neutrals
as well as their property humanity
as well as justice and a due regard
for the dignity of neutral powers
should dictate that the practice be
discontinued If persisted in It would
in such circumstances constitute an
unpardonable offense against the sov-
ereignty of the neutral nation affect-
ed The government of the United
States is not unmindful of the extra-
ordinary conditions created by this
war or of the radical alterationss of
circumstances and method of attack
produced by the use of instrumentali-
ties of naval warfare which the na-
tions of the world cannot have had In
view when the existing rules of inter-
national law w'ere formulated and it
is ready to make every reasonable al-
lowance for these novel and unexpect-
ed aspects of war at sea but it can-
not consent to abate any essential or
fundamental right of its people be-
cause of a mere alteration of circum-
stances The rights of neutrals In
RESTORE CABLE COMMUNICATION
San Francisco China Japan and
Philippine Islands Are Affected
San Francisco July 24 — Direct com-
munication by cable between San
Francisco China Japan and the Phil-
ippine islands was restored today Of-
ficials of the Postal Telegraph and
Cable company announced that their
cable between Guam Island and Man-
ila P I which was broken about 200
miles from Manila on July 9 has been
repaired
Strike Leaders Quiet Rioting
New York July 24 — Fifty deputies
led by Sheriff Eugene F Kinkead
were attacked by a crowd of 1 000
strikers and sympathizers in the
streets of Bayonne N J this after-
noon and police reserves were called
out to quell the disturbance Today’s
outbreak was the first since the riot-
ing three days ago when three per-
sons were killed and scores injured
as the result of the strike in the
Standard Oil company’s Bayonne
plant
time of war are based upon principle
not upon expediency and the princi-
ples are immutable It is the dtuy
and obligation of belligerents to find
a way to adapt the new circumstances
to them
The events of the past two months
have clearly indicated that it is prob-
able and practicable to conduct such
submarine operations as have char-
acterized the activity o? the Imperial
German navy within the so-called war
zone in substantial accord with the ac-
cepted practice of regulated warfare
The whole w'orld has looked with in-
terest and increasing satisfaction at
the demonstration of that possibility
by German naval commanders It is
manifestly possible therefore to lift
the whole practice of the submarine
attack with the criticism it has arous-
ed and remove the chief cause of of-
fense In view' of the admission of illegality
made by the Imperial Government
w'hen it pleaded the right of retalia-
tion can be made for a needles de-
of the manifest possibility of conform-
ing to the established rules of naval
warfare the government of the United
States cannot believe that the Imperial
Government will longer refrain from
disavowing the wanton act of Its naval
commander in sinking the LuBltania
or from offering reparation of the
American lives lost so far as repara-
tion can be made for a needless de-
struction of human life by an illegal
act
The government of the United
States while not indifferent to the
friendly spirit in which it is made can-
not accept the suggestion of the Im-
pernal German government that cer-
tain vessels be designated and agreed
upon which shall be free on the seas
now illegally preset ibed
The very agreement w'ould by im-
plication subject other vessels to Il-
legal attack and would be a curtail-
ment and therefore an abandonment
of the principles for which this gov-
ernment contends and which in time
of calmer councils every nation would
concede as of course
The government of the United
States and the Imperial German Gov-
ernment are contending for the same
great object have long stood together
in urging the very principles upon
w’hich the government of the United
States now so solemnly insists They
are both contending for the freedom
of the seas The government of the
United States will continue to contend
for that freedom from whatever quar-
ter violated without compromise and
at any cost It invites the practical
operation of the Imperial German Gov-
ernment at this time when co-operation
may accomplish most and this
great common object be most striking-
ly and effectively achieved
The Imperial German Government
expresses the hope that this object
may be in some measure accomplish-
ed even before the present war ends
It can he The government of the
United States not only feels obliged to
insist upon It by whomsoever violated
or ignored in the protection of its own
citizens but is also deeply interested
in seeing It made practical betw'een the
belligerents themselves and holds
Itself ready at any time to act as the
common friend who may be privileged
to suggest a way
In the meantime the very value
which this government sets upon the
long and unbroken friendship between
the people and government of the
United States and the people and gov-
ernment of the German nation impels
it to impress very solemnly upon the
Imperial Government the necessity for
a scrupulous observance of neutral
rights in this critical matter Friend-
ship Itself prompts it to say to the Im-
perial Government that repetition by
the commanders of German naval ves-
sels of acts in contravention of those
rights must be regarded by the gov-
ernment of the United States when
they affect American citizens as de-
liberately unfriendly
(Signed) “LANSING"
Inetinct or Reason?
Honey bees know friends from ens-
mies They run their cities on a so-
cial plan far above that of man and
so do the ants The honey bees and
ants can tell the sex in the egg but
man can t Is that instinct?
A Legacy
“JotanBton has inherited a wonderful
collection of art works antiques and
bric-a-brac” “From an ancestor who
was a connoisseur I presume?” “Not
exactly From an uncle who was
pawnbroker”
To Save Gas
An excellent way to save gas Is to
remove the tip insert a small piece
of raw cotton in the pipe and replace
the tip This lessens the pressure and
a more even and a softer light is ob-
tained Thirty Million Bushels Greater
Oklahoma City July 24— "Oklahoma
will raise thirty million bushels of
corn more this year than last year”
said Don Law-head secretary of the
state board of agriculture today “Last
year the state raised fifty million
bushels” he continued “and the aver-
age price was about 77 cents per
bushel This yur the state board of
agriculture figures eighty million bush-
els of corn w ill be raised and tne pre-
vailing price is about S2 cents per
bushel
Cowboys Capture Kidnaper
Idaho Falls Idaho July 24— Cow-
boys late last night captured the ab-
ductor of Ernest Empey a wealthy
rancher who was kidnaped several
days ago and held for $tG000 ransom
The bandit it is stated came down
from Sheep mountain at nightfall and
was surrounded and taken on what is
known as Crane’s flat Empey escap-
ed from his abductors He was found
today by United States forest rang-
ers and is now safe at Montpelier
Farmers’ Educational
"nl and Co-Operative
Union of America
Matters Especial Moment to
Lu I the Progressive Agriculturist
tfome trams of thought go on
wheels
Sweat Is a great medicine for shift-
lessness Look well to your well If you would
keep well
Every farmers' club and associa-
tion loves a “jiner”
Do it now — now! This is the year
of the great opportunity
Make records of all farm practices
and make knowledge definite
If Folly were an old hag how we
should all seek after Wisdom!
When there seems bo much to be
said is a good time to say nothing
Don’t sit in your easy chair and kid
yourself along with that old tomorrow
sag
Charge any man with being a prom-
inent citizen and he will break down
and confess
Every man In America owes bis
community a month of personal serv-
ice every year
An epigram is a fool remark that
people accept as gospel because it is
easy to remember
And many a man who thought be
could set the w'orld on Are turned out
to be a wet blanket
Opportunity knocks now and then
for the most people but it seldom
bursts down the door
Success on the farm as a rule comes
not from luck or unusual land but
from the farmer himself
The tightwad never gets rich He
may gather some money and property
but it never does him any good
The man who plans his work defi-
nitely before he begins is the man who
succeeds and goes farther with bis
farming
The man wbo gives the most time
unselfishly to public service is the
man who enriches his life which is
the only true wealth
The meanest man is the self-styled
friend of the farmer who places one
arm lovingly about hiB neck while the
other hand rifles his pocket
Some men have such a penchant
for butting into other people’s busi-
ness that one is almost led to believe
that man sprang from the goat instead
of the monkey
OFFICE EQUIPPED FOR FARM
Excellent Place to Entertain Business
Callers— Also Suitable for Keep-
ing Account Books
(By GRAIL R FULLER)
Farming is a business and the man
ager of a farm is or should be a busi-
ness man Every city business man
has an office because it bas been
proved an asset to bis business A
few farmers have also tried it and
proved lis efficiency
A few reasons w’by every farmer
shculd bave a business office even if
it Is no more than a space partitioned
off in the tool bouse are as follows:
1 Bulletins adapted to every phase
of the farming business are now avail-
able and unless these are filed away
they are never to be found when
wanted
2 He often has business callers who
feel averse to walking into the house
and talking freely before the woman
members of the family but who are
at ease when alone with the farmer
An office fitted up cozily with a stove
and chairs Is a fitting place to take
them especially In cold weather
8 The time Is f&Bt approaching
when the successful farmer will know
something of science and an office
COTTON BEING BLOWN AWAY
Use of Staple In Modern Warfare le
Something Enormous— Experts
Give Interesting Figures
Cotton Is being blown up now at a
faster rate than at any previous time
in the histor of the world The use
of guncotton in up-to-datj warfare is
enormous being used largely In the
high explosives for instance the Eng-
lish cordite is 37 per cent guncot-
ton United States ordnance experts es-
timate that every time one of the
big 15-inch guns of Uncle Sam’s navy
goeB off there is pne less bale of cot
ton or 500 pounds One discharge of
the 12-inch gun consumes 300 pounda
of cotton
Those same experts figure that it
requires one pound of cotton to make
one pound of gunco'ton the loss In
weight beint accounted for in the
treating of cotton in a mixture of
strong nitric and sulphuric acid One
of the estimates that 4000000 men
on the firing line use up 40000 bales
cf cotton in a week In fairly active
Complete Letter Writer
The experienced letter opener can
detect the Imitation personal letter at
the first glance at the printed type-
writing to forestall the usual fate of
such a letter a Philadelphia firm
frankly begins its imitation letter
thus: “This is not a typewritten letter
but far better because it has taken
hours of experience of expensive
talent to write the information it con-
tains Impossible in any letter dictated
on the spur of the moment”
Objects to Clock Fiend
1 don’t care much about hobbies
myself” said a man from the West
visiting New York as he handed back
his friend's album full of postal card
atrocities “though I don't object to
people who bave them so long as
they are unobtrusive hobbies Breed-
ing poultry for instance is all right
A collection of shells or stamps isn't
out of the way while photographs of
beauties celebrated actresses etc
are rather enjoyable But there was a
man in my town who had a penchant
for clocks It doesn’t matter what
room in his bouse you entered there
or den is a good place to make bis
experiments on soils or other mate-
rials or to keep his samples of fenc-
ing soils or seeds
4 There Is no farmer but keeps
some accounts more or less correct
according to the business ability ot
the man He Bhould have a place t
keep these account books Neatl
printed farm stationery and a type-
writer in his office will help the farmei
to find a better market for his prod
ucts
Vhe cost of fitting a farm office ca
depend upon the inclinations of th
man It rhould contain a desk prefei
ably roll top on account of its man'
drawers and pigeon boles an exten
sion of -the phoue from the bouse
shelves or cabinet for filing bis books
pamphlets and samples a typewrite
for his own use and that of his son:
and daughters a stove and a tabi
for his experiments Other equipment
may be added as needed
ABANDONS ONE-CROP SYSTEM
Southern Farmers Are Being Taught
Success — Adopt “Hay Hogs and
Hominy" Slogan
With assurance thrt the South has
at last heeded the “hay hogs and
hominy" slogan abandoned the one
crop system and set abcut earnestly
to diversify her crops southern
boards of trade and commercial ant
industrial organizations of &U kinds
are busy advising the farmers how
to adjust themselves to these new mn
ditions Bays an Atlanta dispatch
Editors iucators and lecturers
have dinned 4 into the ears of the
farmers the idea that the South can
grow as fine a quality of hay as the
West With this idea in view an in-
vestigation was recently made The
farmers asserted there was no mar-
ket for the pe&vine hey
The commission grain merchants
were then moved on They acknowl-
edged that they did not care to buy
peavine bay and gave their reasons
It was not cured properly and in
addition possessed a fattening qual-
ity w'hich made It unsuitable for
w’ork animals As a result the South
has now a propaganda of education
on how to cure and bale bay
A rather unique plan for Improv-
ing the grade of southern cattle Is
being urged and to this idea the farm-
ers have taken readily
The county commissioners of every
county in every uhem state are
urged to purchase a thoroughbred
sire of one of the best breeds of cat-
tle for the free use of the farmeis
of the country
Along this same line of diversifi-
cation It is also propose d that every
southern town have r market day
While a complete revolution cannot
be expected in one year the de-
crease of nearly 50 per cent in the
sale of fertilizer tags this year and
the unquestionably large cut in cot-
ton acreage show tha King Cotton
is tottering on his throne The great-
est fear 1b that a high price of cotton
next year due to the crop shortage
will plunge the southern farmer back
to where he came from to the unend-
ing field of white
HONESTY IN FARM PRODUCTS
Consumer Doesn't Know Individual
Producers and-Blames Community
for the Work of One
One of the unfortunate things about
marketing is that one dishonest pro-
ducer in any community w’ill give prod-
uce emanating from that district a
black eye from which it will take
years to recover
The purchaser doesn’t know the in-
dividual — he knows only that the prod-
uct with which be was “stung" came
from a certain district and as a result
all commodities originating from there
come under the same suspicion
A smellable ben-house and dirty
nests are not an inducement for full
egg-baekets
fighting although guesses on that
score are necessarily vague
Pow’der companies have been very
large buyers of cotton — Wall Street
Journal
Convenient Chick Yard
You can make a convenient yard
for chicks from old burlap sacks If :
you happen to have a supply K?p
them open sew together lengthwise
and nal) to strips at the top and bot-
tom of posts sets In the ground The
fence can be made in sections that
are easily taken down and packed
away to use next year
Study Elevator Methods
There are many farmers’ eleva-
tors that are owned co-operatively
and successfully conducted Farmers
new to this method of marketing
grain would do well by studying how
these elevators are operated
Adds to Attractiveness
A little improvement around the
farm home will do much to add to the
attractiveuess oi the place from the
standpoint of the boya and girls
was a clock The clocks were all
going but they did not by any means
keep the same time The consequence
was that all through the day and
night those clocks were striking or
chiming The echoes in the dark
hours were horribly unsettling to hear
and one never knew what time of
day it was He was so enthusiastic
about his clocks that his wife I hear
has Eued for separation I don’t won-
der at It I’d sooner bave a sunstroke
than spend another night with him”
Women Farmers
The success of women in farming ie
no longer an experiment for we can
point to many brilliant examples of
former clerks schoolteachers ste-
nographers lawyers and women of
leisure who are now earning a com-
petence many on the road to wealth
by reason of their contract with the
soil If a woman will hut meet the
coraraon-sense requirements that are
demanded by the best gardeners and
give prompt attention to the market
end of the business there is no reason
why she may not earn a comfortable
living on even a few acres of land
HAPPINESS HAS BEEN FOUND
Thrift According to Banker Guaran-
tees the Unattainable for Ages
But Doea It?
"Thrift” runs a bank's advertise-
ment in a car window where many a
weary eye must see it night and morn-
ing “is the guarantee of happiness”
Men have hunted for happiness for
many a century hunted for it in
wealth in power In knowledge in
friendship in accomplishment in re-
ligion in gratified vanity in change in
freedom in crowds and in solitudes
No one has been able to fill a lifetime
with happiness It may not have been
intended that anyone should In all
lives there are oases — garden spots in
the desert with springs of clear water
where one may lie in the shade of the
trees But at the end of the road the
pain at least matches the comfort un-
happiness balances the happiness
Sometimes old men say that life is
worth the trouble it takes to live it
and sometimes they deny it
"But” says the advertisement in the
car which people stare at when they
are tired of looking out of the window
or at each other “thrift is the guaran-
tee of happiness”
Some are thrifty because they can-
not possibly procure more than the
necessities of life Others are thrifty
from choice They worry about their
money They wake up in the middle
of the night with cold sweat on their
brows having dreamt that the bank
bas failed They deny themselves
pleasures which might have allowed
their lives to blossom out and expand
For the sake of a problematical future
they build high walls around the pres-
ent They envy those who have more
than they and sometimes they despise
those who have less
With a few thrift becomes the
noblest of virtues It is so when it is
practiced for the sake of others But
it does not guarantee happiness We
must go a little further to And the pan-
acea which shall cure humanity of ills
and relieve it of its sorrows If we
could And out the secret we should put
the seal on the philosophy of all the
ages For philosophy Is a seeking after
the solution proclaimed so glibly in
the car placard Philosophy’s Arst
question is whether life is worth liv-
ing and Us second question is how It
may be made most worth living that
is happiest
There Is happiness in being without
envy in being without hatred in being
without fear There is happiness in
helping others There is happiness in
Anding what one can do best and do-
ing it with all one’s might There Is
happiness in the emotion of brother-
hood in feeling in one’s own body the
Aow of great forces which sway man-
kind from generation to generation
But if we try to deAne happiness or
to point the way to it we are as futile
as the placard on the car If there is a
roed to happiness every man must
And it for himself and perhaps the
Arst step will be renunciation and hu-
mility Time’s Changes
"You know when I was living here
some years ago” remarked the man
who had Just dropped in "you had a
little boy about six years old whom
you thought the brightest boy in the
world"
"Yes I remember” was the reply
"but he's been through college since
then”
What She Would Say
Bashful Student — What would you
say if I should throw a kiss at you?
Miss (blushingly) — I’d say you were
the laziest fellow I’ve ever met — Co-
lumbia Jester
The Grand Smash
“So you bought (kn auto How are
you getting along?”
"On crutches”
Sugar beets can be successfully
grown In Ireland
i wonderfully
There's a mighty satisfying flavour about these thin wafery bits of
toasted com
So easy to serve too on a hot day for they’re ready to eat right from
the package — fresh crisp clean Not a hand touches Post Toasties in
the making or packing
Served with cream and sugar or crushed fruit they are delicious
Unexpected Chicken
A stranger arriving in a small town
hailed a passing resident and in-
quired: "Can you direct me to a place
where thew take boarders?”
"Hemmandhaws keeps ’em” the
man replied
"Is that a pretty good place?”
"Fair to middlin’”
“Have chicken very often for din-
ner?” “Reg’lar and unexpected"
"What do you mean by regular and
unexpected?”
"They have chicken reg’lar every
Sunday — ”
"I Bee — "
"And they also have it when an au-
tomobile unexpectedly kills one in the
road” — Judge
Talented
"Wasn’t your wife something of an
elocutionist before she married you?”
aBked the man who had just returned
from an extended stay abroad
"She Is yet” answered the other
sadly thinking of her oratorical efforts
on the occasions when he had come
home late from the club
sCanadian'Wheat
to Feed the Worlds
The war's fearful devastation of European
eropa has caused an unusual demand for grain
r from the American Continent The people ot the
world must be fed and there ia an unusual demand
for Canadian wheat Canada's invitation to every
industrious American is therefore especially attrac-
tive She wants fanners to make moneyand happy
prosperous homes for themselves while helping her
to r&isa immense wheat crops
You can get a Homestead of 160 acres FREE and
other land can he bought at remarkably low prices Think of the money yon
can make with wheat at its present high prices where for some time it ia lia-
ble to continue Daring many years Canadian wheat fields have averaged 20
bushela to the acre — many yields ae high aa 45 buahela to tha acre Wonderful
crop alao of Oala Barley sod Flax
Mixed farming ia fnlly aa profitable an indnatryaa grain raialng The excel-
lent graaaea full of nutrition are the only food required either for beef or dairy i
purposes Good schools markets convenient climate excellent
Military service is not compulsory In Canada There is no conscrip-
tion and no war tax on lands
Writs for literature and particulars as to reduced railway rates to
Superintendent Immiaiation Ottawa Canada or
G A COOK
DStw men lAKus an ml
Canadian Guvaiimcui Agealo
&
Shrapnel in Warfare
Shrapnel is most effective against
prone skirmishers at ranges from
1000 to 3000 meters when burst
twenty-eight to twenty-two meters
short of the target and against stand-
ing skirmishers at the same ranges
when burst fifty-six to forty-five me-
ters short of the target Black also
points out that a single shrapnel from
a light field howitzer produces a
greater number of hits when the point
of burBt is favorably situated than one
fired from a field gun
Shrapnel is also playing a most im-
portant part In aerial warfare and of
these antiaircraft shrapnel all of
which embody the same general es-
sentials there is perhaps none more
effective than that known as "Ehrhardt
antiaircraft shrapnel”
One Good One
Patience — What do you think of
that new young man boarder?
Patrice — Oh I think he's all right
"Got good eyes hasn’t he?”
"Well he’s got one good eye”
"One good eye?”
"Yes one seems good but he was
winking at me with the other during
the entire meal”
The Way of It
“Are Bell and Barbara blood rela-
tions?” "Oh no It is purely platonic grouch
they have for each other!” — Puck
Development in Morocco bas been
generally stopped because of the war
in Europe
enhanced when rest and lunch '
imimumiii!
LookForThis Name
ft
Olives
and Pickles
— it s quality mark for exception
ally good table dainties
Our Manzanilla and Queen Olivet
plain or stuffed are from the famous
olive groves in Spain
Libby's Sweet Sour and Dill
Pickles are piquant and firm
Your summer meals and
i picnic baskets are not com
j plete without them
ln$i$i on Libby 9 oi yoar
grocer’s
Ubby McNeiIl Libby
Chicago
iiiiiiiii
"Well Mirandy” said Mra Bosby-
shell to her cook "I hear it rumored
that you are going to be married again
this time to Joe”
“No’m I ain't gwine git mahried
again Miss Lucy” replied Mirandy
"I’m very fond o’ Joe but I ain’t gwine
mahry him”
“What’a the trouble?” asked Mrs
Bosbyshell
"Ain’t no trouble Miss Lucy” said
Mirandy "but yo’ see I done been
mahried three times already an’ tell
yo’ de trull I’m gittin’ mighty tlahed
payin’ out good money to dem undah-
takahs” Perfect Example
"The paper speaks of a certain argu-
ment as being tactfully yet forcefully
phrased” said the young student
“What would be a good example of
that?”
"My son” returned the father "can
It be that you have never lent ear to
your mother’s able representations on
the periodical occasions when I return
home on pay day?”
Read Backward
Jack — How did you come to get In-
terested in that novel you are read-
ing? Marie — I liked the way it ended
Interested
"Your name please miss"
"Iona Carr”
"Oh you do? What make?"
Russia wants automobiles motor
trucks and motorcycles
hour unite in a dish
of
I
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Preston, G. A. The Sunlight (Carmen, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, July 30, 1915, newspaper, July 30, 1915; Carmen, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1918438/m1/2/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.