The Cleo Springs Journal (Cleo, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 1, 1907 Page: 2 of 4
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tllE CLEO JOURNAL
D T Armstrong U Rea
LEO
OKLAHOMA
A Human Brick
When Herman Unger a commercial
traveler down Boston way concluded
to depart this life be desired tome
disposition of his body which would
preclude resurrection Accordingly he
decreed 'bat his corpse be cremated
and that the ashes be mixed with suf-
flclent cement to form a solid rock
Upon bis demise recently bis rela
fives carried out his wishes Mixing
five parts cement with one part ashes
they did the good Herman Into a
brick Pressed into the face thereof
are these words: “Herman Unger
Leave me In peace" But we believe
that such a brick as Herman cannot
and should not be left in peace to ea
cape resurrection says the St Louis
Republic Herman should lit nicely
into the golden and jasper streets of
the happy future If the road to hell
is paved with good intentions why
toot pave the road to beaven with
cynical purpose? Why not prove that
no poor mortal however be seeks to
escape happiness can fail to come
into it at last — be be no moss than a
beatified brick In the pavement of the
Eternal City?
Sanitation of Small Towns
We hear nfich of the reduction in
the death rate of large cities in recent
years but very little about the im-
provement of the health of small
towns It is well known says the In-
dependent that all the infectious dis-
eases claim many less victims in city
life than they did 25 years ago and
the reason for it is not far to seek
Cities established departments o t
health gave to them ample powers
and then Insisted on their being ef-
fective if their appropriations were to
be continued The consequence has
been that not only has much suffer-
ing been spared but thousands — nay
even hundreds of thousands — of peo-
ple are now alive who in the words of
one prominent sanitarian have no
business being alive— they would have
been dead if the death rate that pre-
vailed 20 years ago still obtained
Had they died their death would have
been considered as from the band of
God We know that tbelr living Is
the result of the taking of some very
simple measures for the prevention of
disease
THE DAY OF THE FARMER
Occupation Properly Recognized
One of the Professions
The famner who is not an amateur
is a really Increasing factor in to-
day's life In fact farming is rapidly
becoming one of the professions We
have our agricultural schools Just as
we have our law schools
It Is getting to be a business as
well Farmers have their trusts like
other manufacturers
It is a far cry from the New Eng-
land farmer trying to arrange an ex-
ploded granite quarry into a stone
wall that he may have room In which
to plant his crop and that master of
capital science and black earth ten
feet deep who plows with a traction
engine and reaps with a ten horse
team And between these two types
of farmers the drift is steadily toward
the latter
The comic paper does not laugh at
the “granger” as frequently as It used
to laugh It wants his subscription
The capitalist does not foreclose
mortgages on the prairie farm now
He borrows money of its owner
And what is vastly more impor-
tant the entire country looks with a
respect bordering upon apprehension
on this new type of American who
has decided views on railroads trusts
and in fact on every subject from
the “green bug” to the lecturer at his
Chautauqua This rise of the farmer
into national significance Is welcome
In view of the Inundation of great
cities by immigrants who have sig-
nificance only en masse
The farm is the nursery of individ-
ualism If you are a cliff dweller In
the city send your boy there this sum-
mer and let him see what it means to
create wealth with the help of nature
rather than with the ticker You will
help make him a better American—
The World To-day Magazine
CROP CONDITIONS IN
WESTERN CAM
WITH
INCLE BY
i Lateness of Spring Overcome by Ex-
cellent Growing Summer Season
Copyright: 1907: by Byron Williams
Lazy
My dear do you ever get lazy? As lazy
us Inzy ean tie?
I dot I am free to confess It It sets as
a tonic to me
My feet are the veriest slugirnrils They
drag like a rope In the dust
The bone In my buck ships like rubber:
tny hinges are covered with rust
Ambition Is like a dead hero Don't Care
Is the king of the crewt
I’m lazy plumb lazy and shiftless and
feel tike s loafer! Don't you?
It comes with the croon of the breezes
the Hit of the birds In the trees
It drones with the song of the river the
lap of the lake's ecstasies
It beckons me down to the meadow It
leads me along by the stream:
It challenges flesh to be torpid enticing
the fancies to dream
It says “oh he down In the daisies flat
down on your back In the shade
And list to the chant of the "woodland
the chant of the woodland and
glade!"
LIFE INSURANCE ACTIVITY
The New York Life'e Bueineee Nearly
Up to the Legal Limitr
Marriage ceremonies in India are
full of pretty incidents Tbe chief In-
cident of tbe better class Hindoo mar-
riage ceremony is called tbe BhaunrL
post or seven steps taken in unison
The seven steps ars tbe seven grades
of life The husband often a boy of
14 walks round and round solemnly
with tbe end of bis coat tied to tbe
end of tbe cloth which bis girl wife
wears on her bead symbolical of
tbelr union All the time they do this
they must not look at each other but
upward The Hindoo la bound to In-
vite bia whole caste within a reason-
able distance to his weddiDg Fire-
works play an Important part in the
rejoicings incident to an Indian mar-
riage Tbe marriage season is limited
to two or three months of the year
How to get enough qualified teach-
ers for its schools is a problem which
continually perplexes New York city
A member of Its board of education
at the meeting last month Introduced
a resolution instructing the superin-
tendent to ascertain if teachers can-
not be obtained from other cities lie
said that there are 300 vacancies
With salaries beginning in the lowest
grades at $600 a year and Increasing
at the rate of $10 for each year of
service the jay is much better than
that offered in smaller towns but It
costs more to live in New York and
one does not get to much for one's
money in the way of pleasant humaa
intercourse as in the country
The New York Life Insurance Com-
any announces that its new paid
business during the half year just end-
ed was over seventy million dollars
As tbe new law allowr no life com-
pany to write over one hundred and
fifty millions per year It would ap-
pear that this company is working
nearly up to the limit The New
York Life gained such headway he-
fore the law was passed and suffered
so little comparatively from the Arm-
strong Investigation that the question
with its management has been bow to
keep business down to the limit rath-
er than how to reach It No other
company is writing nearly as much
as the law allows The New York
Life has evidently become a pre-
ferred company
The company's payments to policy
holders during the six months end-
interesting to note that this amount
waa almost equally divided between
payments under policies maturing by
death and payments made to living
policy holders Thus while death-
claims were I111S0626 the amount
paid for matured endowments annu-
ities trust fund installments for pur-
chased policies and for dividends was
$10480135 Modern life insurance as
practiced by the best companies em-
braces a wide field and covers many
contingencies It is money saved for
the aged as well as money provided
for the families of those who die prematurely
I do — and I dream Oh so lazy of castles
and fairies and brooks
That wind like a ribbon of silver through
emerald valleys and nooks
The billows float lightly at leisure in
skies that are hazy and gray
The ripples sing low In abandon the but-
terflies float In tlielr play
The world la as lasy as I am and I am
too lazy to zee —
My dear do you ever get lazy? As lazy
as lasy caa be?
Rag Time
The more wage a man gets the
more time ho wants off to spend it
Never mind: next year we will have
a sane Fourth — maybe
Seven boys and seven girls went
camping in Iowa — and when the vaca-
tion was ended there were 49 engage-
ments A Nebraska country editor tells one
on a well known resident of his town
who stayed down town very late toy-
ing with the wine cup Stealthily
stealing In about midnight he located
the baby's cradle and-started to rock
it meanwhile crooning a lullaby He
was finally aroused from his parental
Once more the farmers of Western
Canada rest at ease and grow rich
while they slumber Their season of
anxiety la over For a time It looked
as though a backward season wus for
once going to prevent the western
country from maintaining Its preenil
nent position as leader of the grain
growing countries of the world The
unusual lateness of the spring coupled
with the rapid advance in the price of
food stuffs gave the pessimists some
reason for their gloomy forebodings
and among even the optimistic West
errors imbued as they usually are
with a spirit of buoyancy and hope
there commenced to glimmer a fear
that perhapa this year their sanguine
expectations were not to be realized
On May day when a large proportion
of wheat had usually been sown there
was this year very little seeding done
Finally however winter which had
tarried so late In the lap of spring In
all parts of the Continent vanished
beforo tbe vertical rays of the Bun
and the hurry and buBtle of spHng
work commenced on the western prat
ries
By the 20th of May 85 of the
spring wheat waa gown and the fall
wheat in tbe districts devoted to Its
cultivation waa covering the fields
with a mantle of green Wheat sow-
ing finished on May 30 and by June
10 the coarser grains were also In
the ground The heavy snowfall dur-
ing the winter left the ground In excel-
lent shape when once seeding opera-
tions commenced and from the time
weather conditions permitted the com-
mencement of work until planting was
completed the farmers were a busy
class The area in wheat is not
much larger than last year but oats
barley and fiax are much in excess of
past records the farmers deeming it
wiser on account of the lateness of
the season to put in a heavier propor-
tion of the coarser grains From the
most reliable reports to hand it ap-
pears that the acreage as compared
duty by the wife exclaiming: "Come
i I Fv “ wtziaw uio nv i Cabo an vuiuiimt
l ? i n ?Ultr°Cklng that em?5r I with 1906 will show an Increase of 12
in oats 19 in barley and 13 in
cradle: the baby Is here with me
A Wisconsin editor W'as visiting In
Chicago and decided he would buy a
new Panama hat Going Into a store
he asked the price of one that
looked good to him The clerk replied
"Fifteen dollars" whereat the editor
asked "Where are the holes?” The
clerk appeared bewildered for a mo-
ment but managed to ask “What
holes?” The editor replied "The
holes for the ears of the jasack that
would pay $15 for a hat like that
When a prominent Kansas man was
a young fellow he hired out to an
editor as office "devil" At the end
of the first week the editor’s cow
flax
died and there was plenty of beef on
tav LUie lur Rcvuw UUUL 1
TRADITION OF THE ROSE
Pr-tty Legend Current Among North
American Indians
The complaints about the poor pay
of the clergy are getting loud and
nobody disputes their validity It Is
a solemn fact that the ministry stands
almost alone among ail tbe profes-
sions or occupations In which the
emoluments or wages have not ad-
vanced correspondingly with the In-
creased expenses of modern living
The clergymen have a perfect right to
be indignant about it
Algernon Charles Swinburne takes
bis constitutional so promptly each
day that the neighbors set their
watches by bis movements Thus we
see that Rudyard Kipling is not the
only poet in England who can Justify
bis existence
A judge bai decided that a venire-
man who has a farm to look after
nowadays has trials enough without
having to alt on a Jury Occasionally
tbe goddess of justice lifts tbe band-
age from her eyes and winks good
naturedly at tbe bystanders
We bare physical culture and new-
Ing and cooking as well as manual
training In our schools but there li
one thing lacking Are we doing thi
right thing by tbe rising generation
not teaching scientific baseball?
The North American Indians of the
western coast have a tradition that
roses were created w-ithout thorns
So tail and fair tiny grew that ail
creatures were attracted by their
beauty and grace Animals that
browse upon grass and green herbage
soon discover the tender swo-etness of
the roses' abundant foliage and then
every rose tree bolding its flowers
aloft but attracted attention and drew
destruction to itself
Every part of the earth had been
given its glory of ross hut in every
place thee were animals which
sought the bushes to devour them
and and tribes of roses were in dan-
ger of becoming extinct In their ex-
tremity they held a council for In
that faraway morning of the world
plants as well as animals had power
to speak To the council all the
rosy came and each had a tale to tell
of suffering and disaster At length
It was decided to send for help to the
godman of the tribes — the Hiawatha
of the west Delegates were chosen
from among those who were maimed
and torn and had suffered most Oth-
ers also were sent who were tall and
fair and graceful Wisely thlB coun-
cil discerned that should Justice be
denied the tribes beauty might pre-
vail In their cause
The conference was long and grave
At Its close an armory of thorns was
given to every rose and thus were the
tribes of roses delivered from the en-
emies— Circle Magazine
the last portion of the beef was dis-
appearing the calf died and they had
veal for several weeks When the
editor's wife became ill and died
however the "devil” took to his heels
and fled He is now a successful busi-
ness man who takes especial delight
in referring to the days when he was
In the newspaper business
When the young man sows wild
oats there Is never a failure of crop
It makes a difference with a girl
W'hat kind of a chap she has on her
hands
Why does the average man begin
story with “I suppose you have
heard this but — ” and then he pro-
ceeds to tell it?
No sensible man ever tries to dis-
courage a poet The fire of genius Is
bound to burn If the kitchen fire
doesn't
Around Akotoks High River Nan-
ton Claresholm and other winter
wheat centers If the present weather
conditions continue the winter wheat
will be In head by the middle of July
The backward weather In the early
part of May allowed the newly sown
grain to get a firm root In the ground
and now with an abqndance of moist-
ure and warm weather the growth Is
remarkable All danger of Injury
from droughts Is practically over as
the green crop covers the ground re-
taining the moisture required for Its
growth and preventing the too rapid
evaporation which might otherwise
Crops In Western Canada mature In
one hundred days of good weather
and as the weather conditions have
been Ideal since seeding and with
spring wheat now from 14 to 18 Inches
above the ground a full average crop
Is confidently expected
In addition to the cheering pros-
pects of this year's yield the farmers
are 40 bo congratulated on the fact
that they still have in their possession
five million bushels of wheat from last
year's crop which they are now dis-
posing of at high prices
The splendid yield of 90000000
bushels of wheat raised In 1900 In
the three provinces of Manitoba Sas-
katchewan and Alberta together with
the almost certain assurance that this
year will see a considerable Increase
Is as in the past calling the ntten-
ATTENTION!
Foreign-Born Bonemizne
The foreign-born Bohemlaus in the
United States In 1906 are estimated
to have numbered 617300 of which
40000 are In New York 48000 la
Texas and the remainder scattered
throughout the west and southwest
One-half are in tbe large cities
Is-wis Single Hinder straight 5 e cigar
made of rich mellow tobacco Your deal-
er or J-ewia’ Factory lYoiia 111
Can Go Long Without Food
The condor can fust for 40 duya and
the englo 28 duya
Tbe Fredonla Business College of
Fredonia Kas desires to send you
postpaid If Interested In a course of
Bookkeeping and Shorthand a cata-
log of 162 pages beautifully illustrated
and containing the most convincing
argument in behalf of the Famous
Byrne Systems and the success of
their graduates that has ever been
placed In print Every statement this
catalog contains is backed by a guar-
ant 4o sufficiently strong to convince
the most skeptical Don't attend an
other school just because a relative or
friend has until you have read this
catalog
If you want to prepare to earn
good salary on a safe proposition fill
in and mall to the Fredonla Business
College Fredonla Kas
Name
Address
DON'T SPOII YOI'R CIOTIIR
line Red Croea Ball Blue and keep them
white az snow All grocers 5c a package
Never mind so much where your
work mny llo do it — Spurgeon
SHOOK)
Courtesy at Home
We are all creatures of habit
men and women alike and the habits
and surroundings of dally life have
powerful influence on the character of
both The root of all bad manners Is
selfishness when self ever Is first fore-
most consideration for others always
lags much in the rear and drops so
far behind in time that It disappears
altogether “One cannot keep tip the
ceremony and etiquette of society
when at home” True for between
friends these can be laid aside They
merely are the rivets that keep so-
ciety together hut not courtesy and
consideration The latter ought to
be so much the habit with each of us
ti at it will become our second nature
and therefore can be no more laid
aside than can an arm or a leg
The extraordinary popularity of fine
white goods this summer makes the
choice of Starch a matter of great Im-
portance Defiance Starch being free
from all injurious chemicals Is tbe
only one which ia safe to use on fine
fabrics Its great strength as a stiffener
makes half the usual quantity of Starch
necessary with the result of perfect
finish equal to that when the goods
were new
spe
1n of 'he world of the “East Best
It is easy to get rich If you will stop I West” and thousands from the United
ending your money Stales and the agricultural districts
A scientist says a man’s body Is 90
per rent water He must refer to the
driver of the water wagon
So many people worry about where
the monpy is coming from to pay
their bills it will come from the
mint of course If it came from any
other sourre It would be counterfeit
The autouiokilist does not want the
earth He wants the roads only
There may be safety in numbers
but few gamblers can 'pick the safe
ones
The fellow who Is Just getting over
a bad drunk Is an easy mark for the
temperance pledge What a pity that
the water wagon jolts so!
it Is easy for a sketch artlHt to draw
a crowd In a park
The country Ib safe— the June crop
of Europe are each month securing
free grant lands or purchasing farms
In the land which has provvl Itself
peerless among the grain growing
countries of the world
Tests of Bravery
Ho voii $Klnl mon hova WlfirA CAttr
age than women?”
"Certainly not” answered the pro-
fessor "Everybody knows there Is
more peril In the first ice cream soda
than in the first straw hat”
Another Brand
“I suppose you realize the danger or
firewater?” said the man who tries to
benefit people
"I do" answered the Indian
thoughtfully "especially the kind the
paleface puts In his automobile"
? caooxad'tf )l
(0QQ§
?5“Guai
SICK HEADACHE
CARTERS
Positively cured by
these Little Pills
They also relieve Die
trMH from Dypep la Jo-
difreetloo and Tooilearty
Eating A perfect rem-
edy for Dlitlueut Nau-
eut Drowliiea Bad
Tame in the Mouth Coat-
ed Tongue lJaln In the
SI tie TOKP1D LIVER
They regulate the Uoweln Purely Vegetable
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE SMALL PRICE
Genuine Must Bear
Fee-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES
The Kansas Wesleyan Business College
Largest and brat equipped west of the Minnie
elppi Official ecbool or bauke and rallroodMg
luuo MtudetitN I profmeiotml tenuhere 6 cer-
tificated teacherM 4f Nborthand beitt penmau
Mhip department went of ColmtibtiH remit ion
guaranteed through Employment Department
grutluate 4-ao riotoMe location Ttilltou Lowt
Board Cheap For Catalogue Addresug
T W ROACH Supt Solina Kmna
THE DAISY FLY KILLER 4tt!YTBall che
flies ontiatforot
ronifort ns every
home- liioate t tit-
an ti r e Munik
iifcimle to per
on a ( leiu neat
end will ue( eoj or
tnjute anvihlng
Ty them ooceauct
yi whl never be
without them 1C
Dot knit Ly ileei
— - — e-n ei $reiuV
for u Uskuiil SrMfcJaS I
A Positive
CURE FOR
CATARRH
Ely’s Cream Balm
it quickly absorbed
Give Relief at Once 50c
Kly liruktfWamfl 8t N Y
&C8sl
Thompson’ Eye Water
W N U WICHITA NO 30 1907
WOMEN WHO CHARM
Health Is the First Essential Toward Malting
Woman Attractive
Modesty of True Greatneis
Abou Ben Adhem had Just found
out that his name led all the rest
"Still" he observed with a modesty
as rare as It was charming "the sea-
son Is young yet I've made a few
lucky hits It's true but JiiHt as likely
as not I shall be at the bottom of the
percentage column In batting before
the season ends” Smilingly accept-
ing the bouquet of cut flowers sent to
him by an admirer In the grandstand
be steepped up to the plate struck
out dodged a lemon thrown at him
of brides was fully up to the standard I by a disgusted bleacherlte and went
Courage
Three tired citizens — a lawyer a
doctor and a newspaper man--sat in
a back room recently In the gray light
of the early dawn On the table were
many empty bottles and a couple of
packs of cards As they sat In alienee
a rat scurried genres the hearth Into
the darkness beyond The three men
shifted tbelr feet and looked at each
other uneasily After a long pause the
lawyer spoke:
“I know what you fellows are think-
ing” he said “you think I thought I
aw a rat but I didn't ”
Some men are too blamed slow and
deep for anything but checkers
“Bab” of Kalamazoo says some of
the folks In hla town have water-
meloned and others have cherrypled
already Which reminds me that now
la the time to begin buying your
Christmas presents
Those Chlrago poets who were com-
pelled by their employer to punch the
time clock and work nine hours a day
Instead of trifling around town look-
ing for inspirations could get even by
rhyming "pain" with "again” "rounde-
lay” with "he did aay" etc There
are plenty of ways for a real live poet
to retaliate
and took hla seat on the bench
Record Swim
Floyd Swackhamme a youth of
Urich stepped on the head of a dead
flab summer Ho felt some pain
In the foot at the time but the wound
soon healed Last week the fin of the
fish half an Inch in length was taken
from the top of the foot having swam
clear through — Missouri Mercury
A Trouble Maker
Towne— The other day I helped your
friend Dubley to select a beautiful
etching —
Browne — Don’t mention Dubley to
me he's no friend of mine
Towne — Why he told me he was go-
ing to send the etching as a present
to you —
Browne — So he did and my wife
made me rearrange all the other pic-
tures in the parlor to make room for
it and I'm not done yet
That an article may be good as well
as cheap and give entire satisfaction
Is proven by the extraordinary sale of
Defiance Starch each package con-
taining one-third more Starch than
can be had of any other brand fur tbe
same money
- ° z — -Yonl
What Ha Gav Him
Bacon — A man asked me for money
on the street to-day -
Egbert — And did you give him any-
should say I did! I gave him a
that he won’t forget in a hurry I”
-Yonkers Statesman
MISS HULDA KUGHLER
MISS ELIZABETH WYNN
There is a beauty and attractive-
ness In health which is far greater
than mere regularity of feature
A sickly irritable and complaining
woman always carries a cloud of
depression with her she is not only
unhappy herself but is a damper to
nil joy and happiness when with her
family and friends
It Is the bright healthy vivacious
woman who al ways charms and carries
sunshine wherever she goes
if a woman finds that her energies
are flagging and that everything tires
her if her feminine system fails to
perform its allotted duties there is
nervousness sleeplessness faint ness
buckache headache tearing -down
pains and irregularities causing
constant misery and melancholia
she should Vemember that Lydia E
Plnkham Vegetable Compound
made from native roots and herns will
dispel all these troubles Hv correct-
ing the cause of the troubfe It cures
where other treatment may hove
failed
Miss Elizabeth Wynn of No 205
8th Avenue New York City writes :
Dear Mr Plnkbam—
“For month I suffered with dreadful
headache pain In the bark and nevre
b"fnorrhatr I was weak and sit of sort
all the time- Lydia K Plnkhiim Vegetable
Compound heed me when all other medi
cine had failed It eernd to tie Jufc what
1 needed and quickly restored my health
Miss Hulda Kughler of No 25
West 15th Street New ork City
Dear Mrs rink ham: —
“For month I was PI with an Interna!
trouble- I suffered terrible agunv was
nervous Irritable and hi k all th time I
bok different medicim-a without benefit
Lydia E Hnkhnin Vegetable Compound
waa recommended and within nix month I
waa completely rtiored to h4altb and I
w ant to recommend it to every su (Turing
woman'
Women who are troubled with
pAioful or irregular functions back-
ache bloating (or flatulence) displace-
ments inflammation or ulceration
that bearing-down feeling dizziness
indigestion or nerv4uH prostration
may be restored to perfect health and
strength by taking Lydia J£ Pink-
hams Vegetable Compound
Mrs Ptnkham’s Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form
of femala weakness are Invited to
promptly communicate with Mrs
I'inkhain at Lynn Maas From tho
avinpUnns given the troublo may be
I f
located and the quickest and surest
way of recovery advised Out of her
vast volume of experience in treating-
female ilia Mrs I’inkham prohallv
has the very knowledge that wifi
help your case ller advice ia fre
and always helpful
— — -
rru
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Armstrong, D. T. The Cleo Springs Journal (Cleo, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 1, 1907, newspaper, August 1, 1907; Cleo, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2027571/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.