Chickasha Daily Express. (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 178, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 27, 1910 Page: 3 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:
CinOXAEHA DAILY EXPRESS caUCSASUA CKLAEOMA.
j I r
' POLITICAL ADVERTISING.
TIMELY NOTICE!
Fans! Fans! Fans!
ELECTRIC FANS
Are getting scarce and hard to find. Mr.
Hicks and other weather prophets predict
hot sultry weather for weeks to come we be-
lieve it so do you. Can you afford to go
through the hottest "weather you have ever
experienced without a fan in your office and
home? The investment is small. The fan
will last you a lifetime.
Don't say we did'nt tell you. G. I'l "Fans
are the best. We sell them.
Cnickasha Electric Supply Co.
J. E. Riddle. Manager.
Announcement
II We desire to acquaint the oeop'e
of Chickasha and Grady County
of our opening one of the hand--somest
Pharmacies in the State
of Oklahoma and have stocked it
with highest quality of Drugs.
It will be our aim to compound
prescriptions out of the purest
. drugs exercising the utmost
care and will extend to all pat-
rons uniform courtesies.
FREE DELIVERY SYSTEM.
Yarbrough & Tucker Co.
122 Chickasha Ave. Phone 254
LOCAL VI EV
For a few days we offer special post
card values in lots of 10 or more local
view cards for one cent each.
A fine assortment of cards one
dozen for 5 cents
Dunlaps 4 1 4 Chickasha Ave.
SEEKING COUPLE
BY WIRELESS
!-'il hy I'liited Press
Montreal ("an. July -T.- 'I I f Cana-
dian police have requested the wiro-
less opera.or at ISel!e Isle on the Lab-
rador '-oa.it to make every efl'orl to
pick till the "Montrose" by wireless to
determine definitely if -"fteV. John
ItobiiiMin ami on" ho boarded thu
Jdontrose at Antwerp are really Dr. H.
il. Crippen aim. Miss I- in-. The
latest dispatches from Scotland Yard
admit th:i the police are not sure m
to the couple on the Montrose. Cana-
dian officials are perplexed
Register at Once
Hegisti'utton hooks were opened 'In
every precinct In Chickasha today.
Every voter 'n the city must register
in order to vote la the primary re-
gardless of whether he has previously
registered or not.
During the next few days the reKia-
tration officers will be found at the
following places and you are urged to
register at once: .;
First ward Precinct 1 W. C. Wells
nl Wells' grocery Precinct 2 Dr.
Wommaek at the Wommaek store.
Second ward l'recinct l ' II. Free-
ma. Fifth ami Chlckslia. I'reelnct 2
J. V. Welbonie nl Carter's store.
Third ward Lawrence Lindsay
rrtmr of deeds oinie at court house
Fourth ward P'-ecinct 1 Hiram j
WUson at I'aiK' s store Second and j
Minnesota. Precinct 2 I). ('. Hart all
Carnegie library. i
POST CARDS
SOCIETY WOMAN
CARRIED A CIGARETTE.
' Newport July 27. As Belieview ave-
nue this afternoon was thronged j:?.
all sorts of traps and motor ears with
nmiiy persons on foot a oung and
good looking New York society matron
wlio.se (laughters are popular came in
She wore a large black hat and
a lingerie princess gown.
A diamond brooch at the throat fair-
ly dazzled. The woman seemed to have
thai tlrod feeling incident to high liv-
ing but she was near her cottage on
Bellevtte avenue. In her tint y bejewel-
ed lingers she held" a half-lighted cigar
e.;te.
She was' the first woman ever seen
on fashionable Betlevue avenue with a
cigarette. She lingered at her front
gateway after taking a walk around
her extensive estate and then entered
her home. The incident attracted a
lot of attention.
Notice of Sale
On August 4 at 10 o'clock at the
corner of Kansas avenue and Fourth
street I will tsell to the highest bidder
the Block of groceries and fixtures for-
merly owned by It. T. Moseley & Co.
7-26-41. RECEIVER.
IF YOU ARE LOYAL TO CHICKA-
SHA YOU WILL PATRONIZE THE
HOME MERCHANTS.
EVERY DOLLAR THAT YOU
SPEND AT HOME HELPS TO MAKE
j rurcu4 k SETTER TOWN.
WHEN YOU PATRONIZE HOME
MERCHANTS YOU ARE BOOSTING
CHICKASHA
"Tlie ...Whisperer
Uulhrie Okla. July 20 1910. !
To the Democrats of Oklahoma: j
It was my fortune to be eie.cied ou j
the democratic ticket the first super-
intcmient of public Instruction for the j
(state of Oklahoma. During the two
years and eight mouths of statehood
we have done more la building a great
public school system- than any other
state in the union ever did in thirty
years. We hace a better public school
n-vKteni than any state east of the Mis- j
sissippi river In the United Slates and j
feel quite sure that we are equal to ;
the best in the whole country. We J
have made a national reputation for ;
Oklahoma in our public school ays-
tem. I am a candidate for a second term
at the hands of the'party. Our admin-
istration has been a success but the
time has been too short to complete
the perfect system that we have in
process of formation. In one more
term we can organize and put in opera-
tion more than a thousand rural high
schools' and with a high school in
i tach of every family in the state we
will have the most perfect school sys-
tem in the world. It Is democratic to
give a successful official a second term
and the constitution written by demo-
crats and adopted by democrats pro-
vides for it. And yet I understand
that there is a campaign of slander and
misrepresentation being made against
me the campaign of the whisperer.
Unsigned circulars are being sent over
the state reflecting on me. 1 desire tot
say to tho-democrats of the state that
the statements contained in these cir-
culars are false and slanderous to the
last degree and that these insidious
attacks of the concealed bushwhacker
are not only unfair they are undemo-
cratic unrepublican unamerieah and
should receive the condemnation of all
honest men. These attacks unsigned
and veiled are the methods of the as-
sassin and the anarchist. Since these
circulars are Unsigned R. H. Wilson
must assume the responsibility for
them. They are in his Interest and if
he is an honest aian and worthy of
the trust of the people it Is his duty to
denounce them.
My record private nd official is as
clean as that of any man in the world.
I have run my office on a plane as 'high
honest and lofty as that on which any
church has been run In this stale. I
may have made mistakes the man
who does not make mistakes has not
made anything else. But I have done
my best and have served all the peo-
ple of the state regardless of party
honestly and faithfully.. I shall not
descend to the plane of the mudslinger
and the demagogue and the man who
does is not worthy- of any office at the
hands or the people. I shall not re-
flect upon the gentleman who has the
honor of running against me before the
democratic primary for the nomination.
I go further than that and say that I
shall not reflect upon the gentlemen
who are running for the nomination
before (he republican primary. So far
as I know they are all excellent gent'e-
tnen and the campaign on my part
shall be conducted on principles that
are vastly above the miasma and poi-
son of vituperation and personal abuse.
There is one statement that I desire
to make to the democratic voters of
the state: The campaign against me
seems to be run mainly by some gen-
tlemen who were not re-elected in the
faculties of our state normal schools
and from what I can learn the circulars
above referred to are being sent out
by rami? of them. We have six state
normal schools.. These schools are un-
der the management and control of a
hoard of regents .consisting of five
members. The members of the board
are Hon. D. S. Ross Blackwell; Hon.
A. S. VVyly Tahlequah; Hon. Scott
Glenn Shawnee: all appointed by the
governor and Hon. J. A. .Menefee and
K D. Cameroft ex-oiiieio members It
became the duty of this board of re-
gents to elect all or. the members of
the faculties of the state . normal
schools. The members of the faculties
are elected Tor a year at the time and
their term commences the first day of
July and ends the last day of the fol-
lowing June. The law requires the
hoard to meet quarterly to-wit the
first week in October the first week iu
January' the first week in April and
the first week in July. It has been the
custom of the board for years to elect
the members of the various faculties at
the April meeting so that those re-
elected would know about it and those
not re-elected would have time to seek
employment elsewhere. For several
months before the close of the last
school year we heard rumors of insub-
ordination among some of the teachers
of the stale normals. This insubordi-
nation through the teachers reached
the' pupils and It practically amounted
tn i) mnfmy ml ... f.Of h ..5 l .- a
reliable information that it was all
caused by a few teachers in these
schools. When the board met the lat-
ter part of April to elect the faculties
I 9
for the school year I'JIO-ll comeue- j
lug the first day of July l'jiu and at
an adjourned meeting of the board
we did not elect the teachers who had
caused the trouble in the schools and
who bad been disloyal and insubordi-
nate 10 the administration and the
state. This does not apply to W L.
Ross Isoin Roberta and wife B. F.
Brown R. R. Champion and a tew
others who were faithful and conscien-
tious in the performance of their du-
ties. Bear in mind and do not f'hgef
these teachers were not dismissed
from the schools but were simply not
elected for this school year. They re-
mained In the schools until their term
was out the last day of June drew
their full pay up to that day and
their contract with the board was at
an end. The board elected other
teachers to take their places that we
considered more eomptent and tint we
telt could render the si ate better surv
Ice Bear in mind also and do not i
forget that a large majority of the
teachers in the state normals were re-1
elected for this school year and only
those that we considered incompetent I
and Incapable of rendering the best!
service to the state failed of election i
and the board elected better teachers i
to fill the vacancies. Another thing
that I ask you to note and remember i
in every ease where a teacher failed !
to be elected It was by the unanimous 1
action of the board. Not one vote of
any member of the board was cast for I
any man who failed to be elected. An-
other thing I ask you to note and re-
member no man failed to be elected
because of politics afid no one was
elected to any position because of poli
tics. The board only considered schol- i
arshlp character and general fitness
for the position. I
There are no more lofty minded men '
in this state than the members of the j
board of regents. Judge Rose is an i
eminent lawyer was a member of the j
constitutional convention and Is a ;
man of character and ability. A. S.
W)'y was a member of the constilu- i
tional convention; now has charge of j
the national schools in the old Chero-
aee nation and is a first class man j
every way Hon. J. A. Menefee is state
treasurer and one of the great men of
this state of first class character and
ability. Mr. Scott Glenn is superin-
tendent of the cit y schools of Shawnte
and is an able practical school man.
To say that I controlled these men
and made appointment of teachers re-
gardless of them is an insult to their
intelligence and is a matter of course
absolutely untrue.
The gentlemen who were teachers in
the state normals and were not elected
for this year failed of election for the
good of the service.. They had no
claim on the state no more than a
clerk in a store or a farm hand has
on his employer when his contract ex-
pires and his time is out. The fact
that they are making the fight on me
that they are the dark -lantern fight
of the whisperer and the assassin
shows their eminent unfitness for the
positions they held and abundantly
proves the wisdom of the board in not
electing them for another year.
And now in conclusion let me say
my office has been checked up by Mr.
Taylor the state examiner and inspec-
tor up to the first day of July! 910.
He found my office in splendid condi-
tion and everything as-It should be.
I invite you to examine his report and
invite you to my office where the rec-
ords are open' to the world. The re-
ports of the state auditor's office will
show that my entire traveling ex-
penses for . the two years and eight
months of statehood have been less
than twelve hundred dollars. We will
go out of this administration with more
than twenty-five hundred dollars to my
credit cash in the hands of the state
treasurer a balance left of the appro-
priation' made for my traveling ex-
penses by the First legislature. And
yet they call me extravagant. It is
my honest opinion that this money
would not last a week iu the hands
of the men who are making this un-
signed circular campaign against me.
I have fought the battles of democracy
and good government in Oklahoma
for twenty years and feel now that
I have the right to ask the old guard
to stand' by uie on the second day of
August. Respectfully
E. I). CAMERON
' Slate Superintendent.
' .).
.
DRIVE ON RIGHT OF THE
CARS.
' ' .
All parties are hereby notified
that they are required by city
ordinance to drive on the risht
4 Hifle nf tftreet railway tracks and
the law will be strictly enforced
Julius Doss Chief of Police. ' 4( nil
f I MM If.-.
u fiU i
ft
YJiiicii
This week's elegant business proves the
confidence of the public and the
low prices we are giving.
We are pushing all our Summer Goods with
extra energy for a quick CLEAN SWEEP
marking our entire stock at prices that
have never before been known.
v-"
TO SERVE WITH ICE CREAM
Many Delicious Sauces Comparatively
Easy of Preparation Can Be
Recommended.
J Suppose that the family cook or tha
enterprising daughter of the family
can make good lee cream. It may ba
Well frozen and known to be of th
best materials yet It lacks a little
style. A sailed will add this and is
not difficult to prepare. Henrietta
Bowie the Boston epicure says to use
an orange marmalade sauce upon a
chocolate Ice cream. To make the
sauce the foreign marmalade is cimply
to be thinned with white wine in the
proportion of a wineglassful to a half
cupful of the marmalade. Heat the
marmalade before tryiug to blend the
wine with It then chill well.
Another sauce may be made from
cherries boiled in claret a little sugar
and gifted and used over a lemon ice.
Sift out thu seeds.
If fresh rasberrien are stewed it is
well to thicken the juice with a little
arrowroot or cornstrach. Then add a
few whole berries. Canned raspber-
ries may be used in winter for this
purpose.
Be sure and have these sauces aa
cold 83 possible when served.
The correct standing position has
been frequently described but as fre-
quently forgotten or at least nesleqt-
ed. Chest up is the essential direc-
tion and one might always say the
only one needed since In lifting the
Chest the shoulders are at the same
time thrown back and doVn and the
abdomen drawn In. To swell the chest
with a full deep breath and to hold
the position is a secret of the correct
position. The chin should be held In
but not stiffly so and the weight
should be on the balls of the feet In-
stead of on the heels. One can teach
oneself to take invariably that posi-
tion when rising from a chair at first
consciously and afterward uncon-
sciously. . Importance of Deep Breathing.
Nervousness can be Cured by formr
lag the habit of breathing dfep and
long and one medical authority pre-
scribes It in his schedules lor nVirvous
women. All singers are Invariably
high-chested and free from colds' or
chronic coughing spells. It is because
they have learned to breathe from the
waist Instead of the top of the lung
as the majority of people do. To
breathe deeply is to stimulate tha
heart and circulation. It means a full
hih chest and broad shoulders. It
moans "Tactics! Uumunily from ih-i
dangers incurred by expositrci It
means a good carriage and well poised
bead. And best of all it. means per
fect physical health.
1 ! '
I J
1 I '
8 i ! '
f i
I
n i m
U 1
l i Mil
it
. - ?t 1 - - - s
is Hot Going: oUndisturbed Femininity.
"Women may be catty in little
things yet they have' a childlike trust
in each other's honesty" said the
man "If they hadn't they could
never have sat serenely through the
situation that faced several Of them
the other night at the opera. I had a
balcony seat. BtRide me sat a woman
who discovered at the end of the
first act that she had lost her purse.
She thought it had slipped to the seat
In front. The woman occupying that
seat stood up shook her wraps and
looked under the seat but couldn't
find the purse. t
" 'Still it may he here some place'
she said. 'My own hag has sliprd
down to the seat in front of Hie. I'll
get It when the opera is over.'
"Then other women began to hunt
for handbags and purses that had
fallen. Some found them others
didn't. But nobody seemed to
mind. They had a perfect faith that
the things would turn up later and
settled back tranquilly for th second
act. Imagine a lot of men letting
their purses lie around like that."
No Beggars In Copenhagen.
Copanhagen lsr a city of 500000 in-
habitants. During a week's stay I
have seen no Bolle.r of matches or
bootlaces no gutter merchant no
blind or other aflilcted persons about
the streets asking for alms-not one
single Hign of distress due to poverty.
I have explored the artisans' quarters
by day and late at night. There ia
not a single spot in the whole of
Copenhagen thai could be compared
even remotely to the slums in our
large towns. There are no unem-
ployed hanging about the street cor-
ners no unkempt women standing Idly
at the doors no ragged and dirty
houses with dirty or broken win-
dows mended with hits of paper and
a ragged apron or a torn bedcloth do-
ing duty for a curtain. Denmark let-
ter in London Kxpresa.
Oslerizlng Society.
A friend from Denmark who de-
clares he knows tells me that the late
king and queen of Denmark put dva
their undoubted and even extraordin-
ary youthfuluess of appearance and
character to the fact that they never
had anybody about their court who
was over 40 years of age. Any gen-
tleman or lady over that. a& was sup-perannuated.-"-Tlie
Gentlewoman.
So Careless.
Child - Mamma mamma my piece
of bread and butter has dropped on
thft buttered side I
Mamma Uo nurse) Mary I must
bog that you will be more careful to
butter Klsia'a bread on the right side.
of the Public
.- m f j
I ( '
' I I -
i i it' J
!
t I i t
i t I
! :
P h
li
i
0
1
DEDA
NFLIC
Special by United Irjss.
. New Orleans La. July 27. Commer-
cial and diplomatic representatives of
President. Davila Of Honduras received
cables this .morning from Davila that
he had suppressed the revolution of
former President Bonilla.
Bonilla's representatives deny the
suppression saying Bonilla has 300 sol-
diers in camp north of the border of
Honduras. They say scores of recruits
are daily joining the revolutionary
forces
vct for j. t. highley
. for state printer.
Over twenty years experience in thu
newspaper and printiiiK business.
.Members of Oklahoma City Typograph-
ical union. No. 28:1. Established the
Bridgeport (Texas'! Reporter itii thu
Ifl-ary Caeite both demo(.arie in
1U02. . 7-2G4t
If You Like
Griddle Cakes .'
; Some
Fon 7 Like Them'
Some More
with
1
ft
r n
V.i 1.. 1 fci
The pure claritk-d juice
of the bc-t mi car cane
made into
r
the m o s t
delicious
syrup you
ever ate.
i tm S
Order a can
of you; gro-'
ter.
FtMCX 3. FOPO I'rn.
Nswr Oions Loulv.-.n-i
PTC
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.
Evans, George H. Chickasha Daily Express. (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 178, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 27, 1910, newspaper, July 27, 1910; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc730625/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.