The Lincoln County Journal. (Stroud, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 31, Ed. 2 Thursday, October 11, 1906 Page: 3 of 8
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Till: LINCOLN COUNTY JOl'HNAL, IK TOMSK II.
The Lincoln Co. Journal.
I'liblifchrd weekly by
Mi**iun l*rc>« l*ubli»h«it|£ Co
Near cor. 4(1* *1. iiml Mb ave.
8TROUD, «»Kl. \
J. M. hUBBABD. tdilor
• !«m Icliio tii.»t tile affitli* tor MkfMOtM A PatACHIB.
of the timed State* in the Hating then >*i<t» differing
c.n.l ration m.y lx jn. »;vo,d,»K iu .!« «r»., I hot
* ’ nocii to u*. whether prophecy
truktrd to the I'mml i"nnm». let ill prophecy mcoriliitg to the
•ion, of which the chief eiigin- I'fOlwriJon of fniih; wr misiitrjr
„,,, . let u« miit on our mini*tcrtiig;
rer •*» tile head. I hi* change in or |lr that teaeheth on tcnchinjf
policy *erve* the purpone ol or he thut echorteih, onexhor.
tation — From 1‘aul’* Kpintle to
H>»nK the con.ml.Jon the thr 1
Inrue.l .l<lir« ol latitwlc cun. A ,hi, „lc„jl|!f
•latent with the oituation and from tile great Apoatle of tin
remove* the appearance of any Gentile* ha* come with ready
effort on the part of the United obedience i* Theodore Koo*e
WMOSt BOYS.
Two million hoy*, the lioyi
of thi* nation, must l»e selected I ......... *"*.*'" I ».„i* ii»ei,i«n» ..r «i.. i •
, . State* to establish and main-1'r,t* 1 rc*dcnt of t,,f 1 n,tc'1
out of every generation to go
out of everv generation to go State*. Here i* a man of nuinv
into the hopper. Sixty thou*. U,n * . Colo,,y . am°"« the gilt*, hut to " wait,- a* St. Paul
and hovs are drafted every Ktf,,l,|,lu N l“ l,ir •Sm,lh- put- it. Oft mtoiBteriflg, ""
year into the armv of drunk- r,li'* •n°°unccment. together j teaching and on exhortation
. . , , i with the re-e*tubli*hmcut of *eems to employ In* most con-
ards to take the place, at the . , , . .
the po*t of minister to l*nna- Menial power*. In the in*tiiut-
the recent tt**urnnce» of|ive inclination of the President
saloon liar, of the sixty thou*. I
ilia,
and bloated drunkard* that ... to preach mav be found the sec-
have been drawn forth from *Hi,ctarJ ,,ut 1,1 ,,s *“ * ,ls‘ ret of the power which hi* lay
m\. to the people ol South nidus carry with them It ia I
America, anil the more particu. n work to which he ha* been £
larly the President'* declara- '‘called," to revive an old term
tioti with reference to Cuba, which implied a consecration to j
should go far to establish the thc ,,,ission of proclaiming the ,
... . , I lOSpel.
the street and buried with the
biirinl of a beast.
Whose boys will lie drafted
next ?
A superintendent of the State
Reformatory in Illinois says:
“I am sure cigarretts are de-
stroying and making criminal
of more boys than the sa-
loons. Cigarettes are not the
effect of crime, but are ,its
cause."
Whose boys are thus to be
criminals?
Traveling liquor dealers are
known to call boys and young
men to their carriages to sam-
ple their poisons, taking orders
for delivery by express
Whose boys will be caught in
this new liquor trap?
You may visit any ol the
-,200 corner saloons in New
York on a Sunday and find in
each none practically but boys
and young men. This is tlie
case not only in New York but
in every city, or wherever there
is a saloon.
Whose boys are in danger?
The saloon can no more be
run without using up boys
than a flouring mill without
wheat, or a saw mill without
logs. The only questionis,
Whose JJovs—your boys or
mine-our boys or our neighbors?
Let the Christian voter an-
swer this question at the bal-
lot box.
greatest confidence in South Y, ^ V, ^ A - ,, .
Mr. house veil is, hrst of all, a k
America and Central America ^talesman, a sagacious politic- 1
in the good faith of this jan, a diplomatist, a litterateur, i
country toward other govern-
mental entities of the Western
hemisphere.
The President has a way of
anticipating the convictions
that ordinarily come only
through length of years and
repeated demonstrations. lie
a soldier, a scientist, and still f
other things; Imt the dominant
bent of his min 1 is to “wait"
on teaching, on exhortation—in
short, on preaching.
The President’s preaching is f
what old-time church goes used
to call "practical.” And, by the §
way, there was a certain note *
TliE INEW PANAMA POLICY.
In deciding to abondoti the
office of Governor of Panama,
President Roosevelt is conform-
ing to the general policy of
simplifying the executive organ-
ization intrusted with the con-
struction of tlie canal and to
the general attitude he has
maintained toward the Latin-
American republics. With the
only real needs of a Governor-
ship eliminated by the progress
of events in the canal zone,
and with the retirement of
Governor Magoon, the Presi- 1 Jowman.-Ex.
The lii*s.t demand for free
schools in «this nation came
from organized labor in the city
of Philadelphia in 1^25. It would
open the eyes of union laborites
to read some of the history of
what their progenitors went
thro in McMasler’s History of
the People of the United States”
Vol. 5, pages 82 to I2U. If you
have it in your public library,
by all means get it. When the
workingmen of that date put
up a ticket demanding free
schools; the right to organize,
which was still a crime; an ex-
emption law, and other salutary
legislation, they were denounced
by the pulpit, the press and the
politicians as being an infidel,
free-love ticket and the ‘‘friends
of law and order” were called
upon to suppress them! You
see that when the masters fear
losing control of their dupes,
they frighten them back by lur-
id pictures of fearful conse-
quences. Nobody can so well be
the guardians of the work peo-
ple as their masters! It is the
same game they have played
since man first enslaved his fel-
FARMERS, ATTENTION
The Farmers’ & Merchants’ Gin is still in our hands
and we have in no way obligated ourselves to anv
cotton company. We will be glad to see all of our
old customers and as many new ones as we can get.
^e have repaired the plant and are not afraid to
guarantee satisfaction. We expect to gin custom
cotton at the same old prices, or buy either in seed
or bales, if we can see any money in it.
Yours for business.
HALL & UNGLESBE.
, , , r ol apology in that term. It
frets under the ure ol miscon- ,
irequcntlv implied a sense of
struction or the possibility of (|isappoil'un)ent on the part of
misconstruction as to his.pur- those emotional worshippers f
poses, more especially as to who preferred to be raised to
his motives. lie is given to Pisgah’s height rather than be
making "shortcuts," and most shoued tlle <'lain. level Path of
- , , . , . their duty. V\ hen these more
of them have accomplished in a ,,, . .
! sentimental Christians came
few strokes what ordinarily | 1)ome from c]mrch without any
would have required years ol light of exaltation on t leir faces
exemplification. lor without the traces of tears,
you were safe in assuming that
they had heard a "practical”
sermon.
Now, if the President had been
a preacher bv profession as well
as by instinct, the doubt may
be seriously entertained wheth-
er he would have devoted much
time to picturing the rewards
of the faithful or to dwelling
on the “terrors of the law.”
There would have been more r
food for reflection in his dis-
courses than the sort of inspir-
ation which is craved by be-
lievers who love to ‘‘get hap-
py.” It may be believed that S
he would not have permitted
his congregation to get far out
of the way. He would not have
been what the “perfectionists”
call a “Holy Ghost preacher,”
but lie would have ' constantly
kept in sight of everyone sit-
ting under his ministrations the
straight and narrow path.
That is, distinctively, the
character of the President’s lay
sermons, and they "are profit-
able for doctrine, for reproof,
for correction and for instruc-
tion in righteousness.” —Times
-$-
A lady of our city has found £
a sure cure for broken dishes.
If the dish to be mended can be
tied together with a stout K
string, then placed in boiling |
milk and left one hour, you $
can never tell the dish had been
broken and it can afterwards
be put in boiling water without
the pieces coining apart. This
experiment has been tried and
proven and many arc the brok-
en dishes which were thought;
to be useless that are now good
ones —Holdenx ille Tribune.
i
60 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Paws
I RUDE
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anvnn* «pn<Un,z a sketch end dp*crit»tP.n m«y
quickly ascertain rur opinion fret? whether an
invention ts probably patentable. C«»nmiu nida-
tions vtrictlyconfidential. HANDBOOK on l*at#*nta
•ent free. OMc*t agency f r urmir paten*-.
Pa'enta taken InMUirli Mui.ti & Co. receive
rp' -ni n tic?, without Charge, ill the
Scientific American.
A h«nd»fmdf ll!a»tr«tM wofklr. 1 r,r*e«T nr-
n<*f any Journal. Term#. 9 a
ymr: four mor.tba. *L Sold by all ntwidaalit*.
MUNN £ Cc.36'8”1^ Now York
Diaacfc Moa €B T SU Waahlbaton. D. C.
A CAMPAIGN OFFER
Only 10 Cents.
Hesiring to enlarge the Journal’s field of useful-
ness ami get the people of Lincoln County ac-
quainted with this paper, we will send ... -
The Lincoln County Journal
Kvery week from date until January 1st, 1907,
to new subscribers residing in Lincoln County
for the small sum of - - - -
ents*
The Journal is an independent political newspa-
per. We believe in men and measures, and we
believe that the constitution should be made
for the whole state instead of either party;
therefore we will urge the election ol the best
man to the constitutional convention regardless
of party affiliation. - - - -----
Also the Journal believes and will advocate that
the entire state should be under the same con-
stitution, therefore we will advocate only the
election of those delegates to the constitutional
convention who shall pledge themselves to vote
and work for the Prohibition clause in the Con-
stitution for the whole state......
If you believe in the home and good government
then subscribe for
THE LINCOLN
COUNTY
JOURNAL
And get your friends to send 1" cents each to
this office and receive the paper each week until
JANUARY 1ST, 1907.
ims bi.yasan
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Hubbard, J. H. The Lincoln County Journal. (Stroud, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 31, Ed. 2 Thursday, October 11, 1906, newspaper, October 11, 1906; Stroud, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc405675/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.