The Guymon Herald. (Guymon, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 30, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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BIG BARGAINS
Ennis & Dale
Relinquishments
V A lin. um of lb'uf-a * tuii • of Guymon, all t.liabl- Unl.
.ll wl! quick at Moo (Mi
S A K'hkI rlaim. all tillable land near 'Jolt. Oklahoma. Our
KMO.W
S A «a - rUinj la Twp. 0 N Kan<<- 8. E C. M., near DUya
oklabomi for ftjoo.oo
t A xxl rlaim la Twp i N . Kan*.- 1 4. E tor 9700.011
No A i-'ood HO-acre claim within :! mile# of a *ood railroad town
, i i >ui.t.. < >r lahoma. * ill sell or trad- qutokly f->r *-Joo On
A No ' Uioj itbln IVi s of Carthage at IkVVl.Wi
\ A* Kood claim aa there eiiM., la Tap 4 N. Han r< 10 K. Will
:. t stay lot*- pr.c. ia.viini
n Aa lmprow-d claim. with crop and ma<hiaery Id Twp 4 N
Range 12. at Omhmhi
A tin.- improv 'U claim u< ar Bois« City at . «ooo.(Mi
No : An iiuprt < <l <Ulm in T«f N Range S. E. at MKto.oo
Deeded Land
No. 1. A No. 1 tract of J.-.-J -J land. improved. within 2 miles of Guy-
mon. on caay terms our price in *iOOO.O«
No. : A well Improved No l farm within 1.'. miles of Guymon
being the N. W.fc. Sec. :3. Twp 4 N , Range 12, E. C. M .
our prtM $l.HOO.no
No. 3. An improved deeded farnie in Twp. 4 N.. Hang*' 13, E
at .. 9700.00
N 4. An improved deeded tarm. all line agricultural land, being th-
S. E. hi Sec. 26, Twp 4 N., Range 7 K., at Vl.OOO.Oo
No. An improved deeded farm, being the S. E. % Sec. 24, Twp. ^
N. Range 8, at HU.OOOOo
City Property in Guymon, Okla.
No. 1. A fite Main atroet lot, worth 9^00.00, being lot 7 in Block 52.
in Eunk addition, our price fiMO.on
No. L' The three lota just < abt of Guymon hotel, our price 4tt.iM0.0o
No. The three lota juat weat of Texas County Lumber yard, our
price 91.aoo.oo
No. 4 4 choice lota in the Park addition, each 9100.0O
No. 5. 0 choice lota In the Funk addition, each 9IOO.OO
For Trade
No. 1. An improved farm uear Hctinesey, Oklahoma, for Texas county
land
No. 1' An impro\e<t farm near Stillwater, Oklahoma, for Texa
<ounty land
No. A threshing machine and outfit, for anything
No. I :i farms In Texaa for Oklahoma land.
No. 2 farms in Missouri for Oklahoma land.
No. C. A section of school land on 36 for anything.
Act today; mention this paper, or bring this paper with you.
ENNIS & DALE
GUYMON, OKLAHOMA
l.«btrd a.tfc h -r vui. The r<*4iag
publu will with lateral th-
publk-ation of thU book which will
< b- full of historical eveatk connected
ith the fcouthw.-t.!
Attorney W. A I^betui ot Okla-
buma City repr«-wnt ing S«-% rt-tary of
Stau- Bill Crone in the mandamus l -
► u«*d by the frtate kupreme court to
< ompt-1 the aMTetar> to recocnlie
officially the petition ot <•<>© \oter
asking that the Taylor election law
b*- r ferr -d ba« k to the i~<opl>- for
• an expre*«ion of their approval or
disapproval, fulled to #le bia brief
yesterday and the court maj now go
ahead and order an election Mr I.ed-
' te tter wa* granted seven day* by the
supreme iourt. the tim- expiring
Trlday. to fll<- his brief in the <•* ••
It s said that the <our: ma> arrord-
.ng to pr. '.dent grant further time
to Mr Abetter, to tile his i>etition.
upon hi makiug a showing that he
rould not do *0 in the time granted.
' but on the other hand the court can
go ahead and order the *vretarv of
*t; t. to recognize the ftling of the
petition asking for a referendum
vote and thui- have a call for an elec-
' tion is«u>*d ThU ha* been one of
[ the moat strenuous fighta made by
thi demoera'- to perpetuate them-
selves in po .-r Assistant Secretary
of State Myers refused to recog-
. tiiz.- the hling of th>- petition on ac-
count of the abwnri ot th«- governor
' w hen it was filed aud then the claim
was made that th petition was filed
after the time set b> law Tor so filing.
Within the next few dayi it will prob-
ably be known beyond a quibble if
the people may sa> whether a party
law hall stand on the statute books
of Oklahoma Judge John II Rur-
' ford of Guthrie, represents the peti-
1 tioners and is r ady for any emer-
gency that may come up It is the
| opinion of most of the republicans
of the state that the law will be
| stricken from the statutes if the
people get a vote on it The demo-
crats probably believe the same thing
I from the way they are trying to
' prr-vent a vote.
x OVER
OKLAHOMA %,J
You'll never split any wood with
a hammer, wisely avers the still-
water Gazette Hut you tan beat It
up so no one els - ran, which should
lie something of a moral.
' An Okmulgee correspondent savs
that Miss Cora Colentx has just re-
covered from a sick spell. She re-
cently cleared $3,000 on a real estate
deal It doesn't affect many Okla-
homa people that way.
The Watonga Republican thinks
that Oklahoma should er<>ct a monu-
ment to foronado and his soldiers,
who were the first white men to
stand upon her soil three hundred
and sixty-eight years ago.
lawton lias a way of producing
positive results in raiding liquor
Joints l<y touching off ,1 slick of
dynamite The last raid of this kind
demolished the fixtures, spilled all
the liquor and closed the ••Joint" vvlih
one simple wrist twist
The Atehinson, To| eka & Santa K>
tatlon agent in Oklahoma, who blew
cigar smoke in a patron's face Is now
sure that he did something worse
than setting the prairie on lire, the
-tatc corporation commission is after
him for conduct unbecoming a gentle-
man.
"Yesterday." says the Hartley llle
Enterprise, when a friend wanted to
borrow ?•_•. t H.irtlesv ille ma had to,
borrow another dollar from another
friend in order to make the loan.
hate last night he was called to the
police stattion to ball out the first
friend, who had gotten drunk 011 the
I money he had borrowed from the
) second."
"I never saw anything like the
crowds that greeted President Taft
along the line between Omaha and
Denver." said I'nlted States Senator
Charles Curtis, who has returned
from his trip west with Taft "At
every town along the line there was
the same kind of a crowd that greet-
ed hlui at Kansas towns during the
campaign last year Mis speech took
him everywhere. The auditorium at
Denver was jammed to the doors
'Taft is a mighty popular president "
"Fight Cannon, tight Aldrlch. fight
Payne," is the advice of Senator T.
1' (Son of Oklahoma to the republi
cans of the state and all states, but
nary 11 ward does he say about Sena-
tor Halley, though he came from that
state, has many Texans in Oklahoma
and the people of both Oklahoma
and Texas would like to have his
views on the Halley fight now wag-
ing in Texas. Senator Gore has an
opportunity in the Halley matter to
show his sincerity and fearlessness
and to disprove the stories circulated
in Oklahoma that all his advice to re-
publicans is given from an ultra-
partisan standpoint and from a desire
to stir up a tight in the republican
party.
The designer or the profile of
Lincoln on the new cent says: "If
you will look carefully at the coin
you will see that I have made him
smiling 1 wanted to show the sun-
shine as well as the goodness of his
life. My intention has been to pre-
sent a situation In which Lincoln
might have appeared at his best.
Flnallv I imagined him talking to
'a child That is the face on the coin.
A man or woman Is natural when
speaking to a child When adults
converse they are usually on guard,
but in talking to children their faces
relax and they are at their best. It
was Lincoln who said that God must
i love the common people because he
[ made so many of them."
The fourth assistant postmaster
general, upon application by Ewing
j Herbert, postmaster of Hiawatha,
lias Issued a most important order.
Inasmuch as it will put the roads
question in the power of rural car-
riers. The order permits the post-
master to suspend mall delivery
thirty days when the carrier reports
habitual neglect of roads by any pat-
ron overseer or trustee. If the road
isn't made good within thirty days
the postmaster is requested to recom-
mend that the badlv kept portions
be permanently withdrawn from the
route Doubtlesa the same authority
will be e\iended to other postmasters
on application. Postmaster Herbert
says: "A rural route is held to en-
hance the value of a larni more than
♦ 1,000, and it is worth iino or more
a year to any farmer to have his mall
delivered, so it is li.irdiv probable
thut there 11 be any neglec' Of the
roads where this order applies."
Good, Dependable
Hardware
" •
— the kind you
like to buy
When you pay out cash is the very-
kind we handle all the time A
;ood line of tiuwari'. enamel war-
washing machines, ( furniture, re-
frigeratory. stoves, en Com> i t
every now and then
Mathews Hardware Co.
Second Do or South
of First National Rank.
GUYMON.
OKI.A.
Mis John P. St, John w it• of the
Kansas ex-goveruor. is writing a
1 took with Qi^anah Parker, the
iamous Cominant he cliiet, of Cache.
Oklahoma, and his white mother.
Cynthia Parker ,t- the central
tigtit.s Tie- I'arkei family ill the
t. 1 r 1 \ " s of the nineii 1 utli century
emigrated from Georgia to what is
now Parkei county. Texas, and
formed a settlement. The Comman-
tlies were on the warpath anil killed
several of the members of the Parker
family and carried off a little elght-
vc:t: old girl named Cynthia Ann.
who was a full cousin of Mrs. St.
John. Although the surviving
relatives hunted for the child for
t ars th<: final': up as
dead until twenty-threi .eats later a
company of Texas Rangers had a
desperate tight mi northwestern
Texas with a hand of Comnianche In-
dians. They killed or captured the
entire band. Among thus,, taptured
was a woman discovered to be white,
vtith a half breed papoose. The old
Parker kidnapping incident was re-
tailed and th" woman sent to the
home of an un. le ih Missouri, who
claimed her as the lost Cynthia. The
nirl had been the wife t>t the chief,
Not tit a anil had forgotten how to
talk Knglish. but still remembered
that her name was Cynthia Ann. She
mourned long for her Indian hus-
band and two boys, one of whom is
now the famous Quanah Parker. The1
littl> child she had with her when
captured, soon died ,as did one of the I
Indian boys in the camp. Cynthia
Ann after a time became rnonriied|
to the separation and liv«>d the rest
of her life in her uncle's home
Uuanah s white relatives are quite
proud of hini. Mrs Sl.lolin recently
visited hlni at his home and was tie
Count) Court First Moiuul) in Oct.
County court will open next Mon-
day A large number of cases are
on the docket, which means that an
unusual interest will be taken Fol-
lowing are the eases on the civil
docket.
CIVIL DOCKKT
State of Oklahoma vs. Wtu. West-
moreland. two counts, selling liquor.
State of Oklahoma vs. C. O Mun-
, day obstructing public highways
State of Oklahoma vs. Geo. Raker
transporting liquor
State of Oklahoma vs. Price Miller
two counts, disposing of intoxicat-
| ing liquors
State of Oklahoma vs. Print Har-1
rison transporting liquor
State of Oklahoma vs. Rban llar-
1 rett assault and battery.
State of Oklahoma vs. Mrs. N.
Thompson |>etlt larceny.
State of Oklahoma vs. Silas Lewis
transporting liquor.
State of Oklahoma vs. J. D. F.
. rade selling liquor.
State of Oklahoma vs. Chas. Gates
cruelty to animals.
State of Oklahoma vs. Chas. Mor-
row pointing pistol
State of Oklahoma vs. Chas.Wiede-
myer carrying concealed weapons.
State of Oklahoma vs. Henry
LHoehne carrying concealed wea-
pons.
State of Oklahoma vs. Lula Over-
hault keeping bawdy house.
State of Oklahoma vs. Alt Harri-
son selling liquor.
State of Oklahoma vs. Joe Yoe
selling liquor.
State of Oklahoma vs. L. G.
Chandler selling liquor.
State of Oklahoma vs. A. S. Har-|
well gambling.
State of Oklahoma vs. John
Schooler gambling.
State of Oklahoma vs. John
'Schooler gambling.
State 01 Oklahoma vs. Charley-
Stewart, John Schooler and A. S.
Harwell robberv.
CIVIL DOCKKT.
Fred A. Groves vs. J. S. Prince—
reflex in.
Johnson CountV Savings bank vs.
Cohen Allison, et al--note.
O. A Webb vs. Ronheur—debt.
Townley Metal Hardware Co. vs.
Stratton-Pottinger Hdw. Co.—-debt.
Sentney Wholesale Grocery Co. vs.
H. C. Hague—debt.
Teresa Farmer vs. E. J. Cole—ap-
peal.
Norvell-Sharpleigh Hardware Co.
vs. Robertson Hros. debt.
Hutchinson Produce Co. vs. J. H.
Ackei debt.
Fairbanks. Morse & Co., vs. Strat-
ton-Pottinger Hdw. Co. -dept.
Fairbanks. Morse & Co. vs. Pot-
linger Hdw. Co. -debt.
II P. Williams vs. V. J. Warren —
debt
County commissioners vs R. 0.
Taylors bondsman forfeiture.
F L. Armstrong vs. C. R. I. & P.
railway damages
(5. T. Westerfleld vs. L. M. Harper
debt.
Norvell-Sharpleigh Hdw. Co. vs.
Stratton-Pottinger Hdw. Co. -debt.
Hithards-Schrebed Candy Co. vs. J.
F. Allison, et al. — note.
Haxelton & Langston vs. E. J. Al-
bright debt.
Stromberg-Clark Telephone Mfg.
Co. vs. K J. Albright debt.
Anna L Messman vs. I. S. Perkins
debt, attachment
First National Rank vs. W. S. Rid-
dle debt.
Eastman Kodak Co. vs. W. S. Rid-
dle debt
Walter Hilton vs. Stonebraker-7.ea
Cattle Co. appeal.
('. W. Jones vs. Stonebraker-Zea
Cattle Co. appeal.
NOTICK.
If you're building a new house, to
be painted: or if the house, or barn,
or other property you now have needs
painting, get acquainted with the
facts about Povoe Lead-and-Zlnc
Paint.
It will nave you a good deal of
money: takes fewer gallons for a
given surface, und lasts longer than
ordinary palm: saves painter's time
for mixing better mixed than by
hand.
It's economy in first and last
■ ost Insist on Devoe Lead - an d-
Zlnc paint: of your painter.
WANKER * HAMILTON Agts'
Farm Loans
Wt ran make you farm loaaa any-
where iu Texas county on good land.
For references to our farm loans, ate
anyone we have closed with or Flrat
National Rank of Guymon When
we promise to get you monev, «« get
It.
Agent for the Aetna Building and Loan Association
Harry Clark.
First National Bank Building, Guymon
E T. GUYMON. Prealdent I. E CAMERON. Cashier
CHAS. SUMMERS, Vlce-Pres. G. W. RIAKELY. As s t. Caahler
ESTABLISHED IN 1901
The BEAVER COUNTV BANK
GUYMON, OKLAHOMA.
Capital aod Surplus.
WMM
Our depositors are ptotecled by the De-
positors' Guaranty Fund of the State of
Oklahoma. ->
Dim-tor .
E. T. Guymon, Chas. Summers, I. K. Cameron. E. C. Summers,
John H. Lott, R. R. Quinn, G. W. Raird.
t
Law Office Of
George H. Healy
Attorney-at-Law
We invite your confidence. Write
or call at' our office in Texhoma
Oklahoma, in charge of - - - -
Attorney Jas E. Breslin
Childers Bros. & Bradshaw
Headquarters for Grain, Feed, Flour, Meal,
Salt and Coal.
WAl.ON YARD IN CONNECTION.
Guymon,
Okla
W. B. KEMP
The Blacksmith
\Yunts your buMiness. Now
ocated south of Jackson Bro's.
Hardware store.
Horseshoeing a Specialty.
GUYMON, OKLA.
Wm. DUTCH
BAKER
Rread, Pies, Cakes, Runs, Etc.
that stand the test. Rest in
town.
Phone 73.
Free Delivery.
HENN WANTED.
Nine rents per pound cash, or 10,
cents in trade. We want several tons
of nice hens. We are paying 9
cents per pound cash, and 10 rents
in trade for them. Why sell your
produce for less when wo always pay
the highest prices? We pay for
turkeys 10 cents cash or 1 ? cents in
trade.
JACKSON MERCANTILE CO.
Subscrih" 'or the Herald
Headache
neuralgia
backache
of the Little
Tablets
and the
Pain ia
I ha* aud Or
Milo AnilPil*
PUIt for vein mi
find itwi ihcv arc 4m
«K Ik«( due vM
nrulnly n t a uf
ftrtr the dcilrct
raw
Mn J P BrteaM.
Tonapah, N«*.
AM) TM£ PAWS 0
RHEUMATISM
• d SCIATICA
25 Doses 25 Cents
Your Dmifiai Mill Dr. Miki' Ann-Paw. PlUa'
and h< i, authortitd to return ih« price ti iht MrU
M<(t «wl> ' * u faHt « brief 11 ron.
(
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Zimmerman, Warren. The Guymon Herald. (Guymon, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 30, 1909, newspaper, September 30, 1909; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc272900/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.