The Cushing Democrat (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1911 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
CUSHING DFMOCHA
cmxm ftwt co
tuUon I'
SON OB MOON
Mt«lM to Irnril
|i<lt mill I»1 »-r» hi
|y, if tt*i4 rudie
rlllull 4»f lllr |l
*1
hi* fur jremi\ »
without fimr ol
I > Mm! •
i»iit ,
Tin* id. • l
III Hi
tinic „
the Washington lleraM
In th«* fin»t '. it in wytrndj
question that hamp-i liMitf in
burn in if in the nun We are "
■Irtii-k with thin, howeier. in th-
•uinuier time than *t thin »*hmoii ,
but fl'W |NNI{)||< l»Cen llf»* 1 |
enough to <liK|iui<- it At any tum I
Hrienti*ta have f««r reaturim
Npeeiilnt ing it* to tin- eauae «*f th|
Don't You Know A
BARGAIN
th<
. • n««r in I
h « ao mtieli I
i»t it toil** f>i
iriwrallv adopt*
I"
in
m«t «m u« m»r« '' and far-
Iter tr<>»paM though it ws»
irl«*t il<* iiImi gave the |ihar
I tin- ri-hnkf that Iimn thuml
ilouu ih«» «g»"» for twenty
rn-*. when lie ordered the
utoiit* oof itnuiihineiit to 'M'
iv him who unit without tin.
mighty eata*thrope
,| I.lot out all the |>'lge« of
p bo It . ••IKiueting
>ur*ion« iuto human
ha*** he. u »ur|irurd fit
,* of different |»ha**a of
thi« nature that are to !*• diss®**
en*ti. I Mtp|M«*e that in the be
ginning every ehurseU-r (iikwmp*
every tint of thia human nature,
hut tliat heredity, euviroiiinent or
aeeidental eireuin»t*i»«*«* biota out
thi* tint in one individual and ib*
velopes it in another, and ao ou,
until *«•«• have all the*- different
coloring*.
Itut I aturted out to -ay that I
hail encountered a new kind of
... .... ....— . inn- Itiiile but this soul aeaivhing individual. No In* i* not a new
•una heat. Hjiontaneou* eorabu*- i the world would atill liav kind f(if he in alm«ait as old an th
tion. chemical ignition, the claahf|„. Kcrm and kernel of all „„„„ —,
of howtile (jaws, the conauniptionIjvjjjfion, though it* theolog\ imving been th efirat example,and
of innumerable met eon* have *H|might auffer aon
been put forward to explain the HHP
remarkable phenomenon of the ,.tinn in KometimcH pitifully aliort j,v
nt one o finite «^OIIH.tjmea it in only a atride.Som
tiinea it is a mighty leap
tiuiew it is a fall from
i>what.
The first step in the wrong dir
Klin's rifct
tbeonex. however, has the gr«e»*
or eharm, the perfect wieiitific
aymniatrv, of that of the |{ev.Zed
Copp.
Now comes the Kev.W.W. Ihik
er with h contention which is so
different from that of the -«*v.
Zed ('opp, ami yet wit ha II so per
suasive and illuminating that we
pauae aa it were, between these
two glitterir' hypo.lu'ses da/.ed,
bewildered and flaob^rgaated.
Stripped of all poetr** and rom
ance, it ia aim ply this: The moon
ia bell. Kin-laden aoiria'emigrate
thither at the termination of.Ihcii
earth upon whielf we live, fain
ving been tb efirat example,and
| lie is probably found iu all corn-
era of the globe in every eoniniun-
it is possible that ever-one
I of you have encountered him
i Itut he is new in these columns.
I np. iiU now ot thv wured •*;
iviiiini. I met on. the other
' |'!a>. and oh, he w is sou'-, ind u~-
lv b'tlcv sour. The .world v'a*
the first step is always a tragedy.
Human weakness is always deplor
able, and it rightly repels those
who think highly and try to do
the right thing. No possible ap-
peal for the sin may be made to
wicked mundane ^arecrs. Vl' -vIsuch persons and'tlie greatest eal
wander through the bleak and
barren lunar domains;'having tiei
ther air nor warmth, seeking eoip
fort and fiiwliti"* none, keeping in
constant. com pay as it were, with
their own misery while looking] (
down upon the earth, the hateful
scene of their former sins.
This is a melancholy picture I'o
those who are booked for the trip
anil we believe the preachers are
pretty well agreed that the numb-
er almost eouals, if it does not ex
ceed the census figures in-certain
localities. Still we should think
those parties would prefer free/,
ing to burning. Persons who have
been nearly frozen report that
Som«
height
high as Lucifer 's and ' from mor
till dewy eve" of a human life th
soul keeps fallgin. Hut long or
short, high or low, from a inoun
tain top or over a clod in the VH'"Li| ,, „g nn<j everybody in it
ley. into a bottomless pitfall orLts xv|.OUy. Oh he was bitter, I •
into a slough whence kindly j |%ad lost all the sweetness of life,
hands may litf the one who fell, ^ attention to several tucu
whom 1 had thought to be very
fair citizens and quite estimable
acquaintances. He showed me
how mean and contemptible they
were, how "low down and horn-
ery," as he expressed it. And do
you know I came mighty near to
concluding that my former judg
ment of these men had been
wrong. Hut I took a hitch in
my mental suspenders and con-
sliuled that there was something
wrong with this fellow too.
f investigated aud found that
this individual had been an absoo
lute failure in everything he had
undertaken, that he had even fail
«d in domestic affairs—in other
When You See It ?
We think you do, and we know that we can sell
you if you will come and examine our goods and
prices; BECAUSE we are selling Implements. Bug-
gies and wagons for less than car load priccs. I his
is a chance never offered to you b;fore in this city
and it will be a long time before /oil get another
one. When you buy these standard goods at the
prices quoted, it is about like stealing them.
Hosier disc drills, for 45.00 and $50.oo
New Moline wagons for $7C.oo
16 in. Deere plows for - 14.oo
12 in. " 44 for - lO.oo
2-row cotton and corn planter $35.oo
1-row 9.oo
Riding cultivators,4 shovel sp in* tr|P 24.oo
14-incn middle busters for - - lO.oo
Deere surrey with extension top 85*oo
And all other goods in the same proportion, sav-
ing you from to 25 to 50 per cent on every article.
It is worth saving these hard times? Think it over
OWEN & DUTTON
IN HARTWELL BUILDING
amity that could befall the world
would be the universal adoption o
any standard of morals which tol-
erated sin for a moment. W licre-
cver it has been tried in the lech
irons new "religions in the
shamelessncss of "occultism that
was mere'bestial Orientalism in
disguise, in the sorid amours of
tin' debased and the sophistry ol
"affinities" wherever human
virtue has been defiled, the result I wor(js jl}s preferred soli
has been the splendid repudiation (o hls p0mpanv. A failure.
by all right-thinking people.
Itut this is one thing and hat-
ing I ho sin while loving the sin-
ner is uite another and the latte
is the lesson hat is sometimes so
■ompany. A failure
An absolute failure because his
non success had soured him.
1 also learned that he had
there is a stage ol numbness and i f,j (earn. 'I hat is the
anaesthesia which is not altogeth-j c„| |(.sson being taught and learn
.' .-led out with the idea that
beauti | . , ...
the
world owed him a great deal. The
er unpleasant. Dante equipped i
section of his inferno with a cold
storage plant, which is thought to
have had ,a fine effect upon the
mortified spirits of the sin till.
Hetween these two enticing the
oreies we stand transfixed with
hesitation, doubt and almost pain
ful suspense. -We wish we could, ugmenm.-ni n»» "SB."
yield our obsolute acquaintances) uut,j,.j|y ,-asts aside her woman-
to either. In fact, we are almost j ,|00<j is wjthout sin. Hut that is
.1 in the Florence Crittenton
homes. There was never an in
mate of one of these institutions
who was not a sinner; possibly in
many eases she was "more sinned
against than sinning." iMty may
concede much. Hut in this day
and age of universal moral en-
lightenment no woman who vol
persuaded to embrace them both
— Wichita Rsirb
A LITTLE LAY
SERMON.
1 not the question at issue,
i problem is to gather up the
bedraggled remnants of tin
The
sad
w o
world having failed to "pay up
embittered him against it.
One may not succeed but it fr
not necessarily follow that he is
a failure. Defeat is not failure,
and he who defeated "comes up
smiling" is ever a success. .He
who retains his cheerfulness and
good will toward his fellow men
under disaster and distress, has
really won out.
11 i> to rejoice
with exeeediu:
artd toiled and prayed— atfl
, tailed -and can yet be glad.
E .M. < ■>.
I - | great i *v who plucks the fruit of
manliness so tragically thrown a l)( t his fhp divin,
way and make something worth ;mnoinljn(r ^, watched and w.k
The Florence Crittenton home! while out of them: to take these
i* celebrating today the fifteenth | poor vestiges of ta.th and hope.
ansiveraary of its establishment and tash.on courage a, repent-
here Little Florence Crittiuton. J anee out ol them; to take th.
fir whom nil the Crittenton j tragic weakness and change it m
? «re named, made possible to strength. That cannot be don RELIEVE THE
bvTer death the founding of one by citing precedents and handing SUNDAY TOILERS.
o> r ■ it ,|own the opinions of the from
of the noblest movei e ^ ^ ^ ^ throwers of stones It may he expected that Okla
the history of< | o t]u.'Auvh „f the scarlet letters homa City will soon be numbered
anthrophy. Charles * * #1 j ( ..an|, (.Vt.n ,mto this (lav.•• Th«t among the cities where the post-l
who founded it as a t.Hnnot be done by calling for office is closed on Sunday to all,
his daughter, has pas.sc« a justice and the moral bond. Tha but the most urgent business,
the seed he planted on g « ^ ^ ( ^ ^ |>y t,.„lperin(f Colorado Springs aud Detroit wer
,.f his little one ' |jll!ill(., . i,v rcaciher the first cities to manger.te Sun-
\rhol«A fore*i of loving I1 ' , . ».%. Klrwinv mii«I hmii
for the girl wbo has made th
. _• miutiilre of lier life, i ■
ti rot irMgi- L „ ! ij; on.- way an«l others in sn«»th«*
About her an- thrown t
pushed and is receiving strong en
couragement.
Detroit, which was one of tlw
first two cities to adopt the Sun-
day closing plan, is the hrstesl-
growing city of its size in the
country, a wide awake city of I>k:
industrial interests. As to 'busi-
ness conditions its replica may lie
found on a smaller scale in Okla-
homa City.—1Oklahoman.
HIGH COST OF PRINTING
Two Reno county newspapers
were sold at auction recently, and
half a dozen Kansas weeklies are
advertised for sale. Tlie publish-
ers of daily papers, says the Km
poria Gazette, have to d<> tall fig-
uring to make ends meet., even in
brisk seasons, and in dull seasons,
there is a good deal of trag"dy iiij
newspaper offices.
Everything that a printer man
buys has gone up in price. Lab c
is more expensive than a few yea
ago. aud it is the same '\vay with j
paper, and ink. and all his sup-,
plies.
The butcher and the grocer ami!
other business men can charge
more for their goods as their e\-j
penses increase, and the ultimate,
customer has t-> stand for it. but .
the publisher cannot raise his;
prices without causing a general;
howl. He gets the sain.- subscrip-
tion price that he got when it
him half i.s much to issue his pap !
er. and he can't raise Ins advert-
ing rat»*s without h.ivii.<r the n.ib
tia behind hiiu. And in nine cases
out oi ten lit has to fight agawi^t
ii'iiious competition. 1'ism r
seem |,i h».v • less sense ! an tile j
ord.nary run of iii.-n, in that, they j
are willuig t>. \vork for i '!
rather lliali have nothing So do.
A, , l - IC.
WAR;.: WATER FOR DAIRY COW
Experiments ct Missouri Station Show
Liquid .8 Needed in Proportion
to Milk Yield.
(By H. K. M X VTT. I 'alrv Department.
I'nivt rally .of Missouri.)
It Is very important that the \v:.ter
drunk by the cows eiving three or
more g.ulona ol' miik daily be warmed
to about 60 degrees Fahrenheit. Oth-
erwiso ;he cows will Hot drink as
much as th'jy need to keep up a good
n;i'.k flow, it doess not take much ice j
water to chill a thin-fleshed dairy
cow through and through on a cold
winter day, especially when she is
compelled to v.alk some distance
through the snow or a cutting wind
to get to the tank or pond.
Experiments made at the Missouri
station show that drinking water is
needed in proportion to the milk yield.
That is, a cow giving six gallons of
milk a day, needs about twice as
much water as a cow giving three gal-
lons a day. If the water is too cold
to be comfortable if uienk in large
quantities, (he cow wiil not drink
enough, and as a result will drop con-
siderably in her milk yield.
When Mi.-.-oi.ri Chief Josephine was
giving aLouf lint pour.ds of milk each
day last winter the drunk daily about
31 gallons of waU r Imugtne how
s>he would have suffered if that had
been ice water. It v,as warmed, how-
ever, and Josephine did not chill after
drinking
A good tai:k I. i er or seme other
device should be u c;l this v.iiiter to
warm the water lor tac cows. it
will pay.
W. R. JONES,
Attorney at Law
CUSHING, OKLA
M. B. FURROW
DENTIST
Office in Howe block. Upst?::rs
opposite posto/Tice. Phone 71.
; Office Phone 36. Re«. 26.
Dr. BENJAMIN DAVIS
Successor to Dr. McHenry
physician and surgeon
office: Opposite postoffice.
; h. c. manning, M. d. e. M. harris, v.d.
Residence t'hone
Residem e I'hii
DRS. MANNING & HARRIS
Office Phone 37
Office over First National Br.uk
Cushing, Oklahoma.
Dr. J. T. Dungan
VETERINARIAN
Phone 140 Cushing, Ok a.
TURNING CATTLE TO GRASS
Some Dry Feeding Should Continue
for Few Week# to Prevent Loss
in Flesh and Milk.
It should l>e kepi In icind. now that
gracing lluie is ab<;.:'> u;ou us. that
the Iir>: gra.-r, to < .me is not nutri-
tious to any great ex: nt. and that it
cannot : • !.-li>-<l on keep live stock
in good condition. Seme dry feeding
should coniin - for . oi;;e weeks while
parts e: days the anima s may rut;
ou pastuif Iiat it the early grass Is
wholly relied on either for cows or
other live Bioi-k they are certain tc
k>.-e in flesh and milk. Nutritious
5L
25
Cj*
ns
cm
' 0
s
hv tlav eloninjf. ami their net ion has
■ak been followed h\ ToIimio. Nia^ra
lklB*lll|) »(
hi* hnttli'
ditl
iu»ra I
Kaj
On
ll.v
l, Kvaiu
,1 Kan*
»lli
Ka
i.and
and
v.
KILL thi COUCH
and cure the lungs
Dr. King's
New Discovery
FOR C8t!sr JE&.
mt ILL twmit M yotistts
OOmVTSIO SATISFACTORY
ok movkt utqvdid.
nearly
it hs
that
anced lood wheo
Ion. but not so till
fhi fact ha« teen
many ye.»rs. and
A ho art so plvkSe d
Slfi-ij
Ss 1 3
aS?*
Uo i—
32 O
5 " ;3
"•'= §?3 Q.
~ D", S S
iiifiS
i-;ia
nut*
sS3;:3
SSii,
tvj
j
a - ® a ea
3 = 3 °5
oa-go
» S S 0
s lis
CO
iSf*
Ub
O ?
CD
Mel —
nil
ELr
* '
<- i
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Cushing Democrat (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1911, newspaper, February 16, 1911; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc284325/m1/4/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.