Vinita Daily Chieftain. (Vinita, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 173, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 19, 1912 Page: 2 of 4
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(3Jlu Eailij (Elmftaut
OFFICIAL CITY PAPER
sue is to make it practical from the
hankers' standpoint. The money paid
into the Guaranty Fund In the past
would be absolute loss to the banker
- a. j .n..nrjl lASd mnttttr
August!" at postofflce in Vln.U " to be thrown aside
Okla.. under Act of March 3 1879. now. For the nrst time since the
o..... failure of the Columbia Bank and
ISSUED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY j pru(jt Commny which w .-.
Published by j8tttlli llH a 111811 up0" tK' !Ulnll"iK-
O M MARRS PRINTING COMPANY WttfOH of the banking department of
'this state the guaranty fund !s able
Per week by carrier I .lOjfo
Per month by carrier
Per year by carrier in advauce. . 5.00
One month by mail in advance... .40
Three months bv mall in advance 1.' 0
One year by mail in advance.
0 for all outstanding indebted-
lies.- or w in hi' w lien me last assess-
ment is all collected. Now is the time
to go forward. According to the law
4.6 of average one-fifth of one per cent
r of the average deposits per year would
t). M. MARRS
Editor '"' ""'' ( times the amount necessary
I to pay all losses If the sanw precau-
tions are taken to prevent failures
that are used in the administration of
the national hanking law Amend the
' J vhiuaranty Law so that the maximum
Vinita Okla. Saturday November-4&- assessment for any one year cannot
be more than one-fifth of one per cent
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO of the average deposits. If a deficiency
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"tiood name in man and wo-
man is the immediate Jewel of
their souls. Who steals my
purse steals trash 'tis some-
thing 'tis nothing; 'twas mine
'tis his and has been slave to
thousands: but he that filches
from me my good name robs
me of that which not enriches
him and makes me poor In-
deed." Shakespeare.
O occurs let this be advanc?d out of the
O 'general taxes derived from state banks
O This will give the tax payer a direct
O nterest in the enforcement of the
O law as ho is now interested In the
O law prohibiting murder and horse steal-
CD ing. As another preventative m-eas-O
use Becure the enactment of a law
O that wll lcause the imprisonment of
O Hie officers of a failed iwtnk that vio
O lates the regulations of the state bank-
0ing department for so long a time
O that he will not dare take the risk
OOOOOOOOOOOOUOOOO that some bankers have in the past.
O I In addition to this compel every Stock-
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO lu'r n "Ute baftk " ve s'"vtv
q bond to pay the double liability im-
q 1 posed by the law upon his stock. Then
q make it a felony with a penalty of
Q'from five to twenty years for any otH-
Q Cer of the state banking department
q'Io permit a bank kown to be In an
q insolvent condition or to be violating
O the provisions of the Guaranty Law.
q to continue In business.
q 1 When such laws as this are placed
q on the statute books of Oklahoma you
q Mr. Danker will not find the burden
r'of guarnnte J deposits heavy but will
O find It the most beneficial law ever
enacted. The people are proiecieu
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BOOSTING.
Help your town along by
boosting! Wear a bright and
hopeful face. Do not be for-
ever roosting somewhere near
the walling place! You can't
help your town by knocking if
it's in a backyard grove but
some optimistic talking does a
lot to help things move. In the
mud one town was sticking
evidently anchored there for
her people all were kicking all
were dishing up despair. All
were groaning o'er their taxes
shedding teardrops in a stream
all had hammers clubs and
axes ready for each helpful
scheme. So the village sat and
(lotted till a booster lauded
there; soon the trouble's seat
he spotted saw the fungus in
tie- aii and he jarred the vil-
lage xtronkcrs stirred them up
to hump along till the place
was full of jokers and the
breeze was full of song. Citi-
zens forsook the habit of bewail-
ing tills and that and the timid
business rabbit rustled like a
tiger cat and Ih-y nil turned in
ker-w hooping singing forth the
hamlet's praise and that ham-
let lately dropping filled Its
neighbors with amaze. Now
this story true as preaching.
sXows what on-:- lone man can
do is instead of doleful screech
ing he. yells "cockadoodledoo! "
For you stimulate your neigh-
bors every time you give three
I been and the harvest of your
labors will be reaped In coming
years. WALT MASON.
ft
n now and will help protect you. unless
q you attempt to take away their pro-
q tectlon.
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OF A
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO'
i o
THE SIMPLE GLORIES
NEWSPAPER.
Col. Henry AVatterson's Peroration to
His Full Page Review or the Forty-
Four Years of the Life of the
O Courior-Journal.
"The C'uirier-.Iournal has ildue Its
9 part as a chronicler of the trnnsac-
9 Hons In which the living and the dead
P we have rained were the heroes and
P dramatis personae it was born amid
O the ruins of the Confederacy. Above
O all it h&fl nbicod the solidaritv
of the Union and the restoration of
the South In that Union; seeking to
pour some sunshine into the daily life
of the community; without obtrusion
to support the law. without ostenta-
tion to aid the church; a kindly clean
ly visitor to each man's fireside. It
has lived to see witli exultation echoed
in all hearts; and. instead of looking
b i !; witli sorrow upo'i the disasters
of Vickeburg and Appomattox to hall
I lie glories of Manila and Santiago as
more than compensation lor the shat-
tered Lopes of Its lost cause: tinged
tin' single regret that Grant and
SiK'imnil and .lohnstoii were not
There? will be made ai the nbti leg- alive to witness the comradeship in
islature of Oklahoma an attempt to 'arms of Miles and Whcele'- Khafter
'imcnd the Hank Guardanty Law. and Lee. the partnership glory of
Anent this (lie Hank Ieposit liuaran-llfc-wcy and Hobsou; once again as in
te Journal of. Vinita Okla. the only days of old the Puritan and Cavalier
publication supporting the Ouejknteel no longer such hut simple Amrri-
Law in the current Inane says: cans Jotned hand in hand to advance
If any oT the opponents of the Guar-uhe CUM of religion and civilization
:inty Law have any hopes of the re- and to rxtimd the area of liberty.
peal of the Oklahoma law by the ftetb "What lies lxyond the older among
might as w-ll dispel um M-ok not to penetruti
legislature the
They have
know by actual experience that this to the final Judge and may go shunt
law does protect them fgrom any pus- Ing: not in the least fearing that God
sibility of loss through the failure of who led the children out of the Wil-
li bank. According to flte hist report 'deiness. and gave to the modern world
made to the hank commissioner there a Washington .und a Lincoln will not
were 621 state banks hv Oklahoma. takej(care of all the interests of this-
The majority of rhich are small b-.inka great republic between Porto Rico and
so r.tar it is not likeiy that fh awe- the Philippine Islands between Ha
ne: nnmtmr at iwnuim tinantiallv Ih-lvunn iwi llnwnll even he took care
teresieii in . own U in Oklahoma Isjof the territory irf Louisiana and he I
more than twenty. This would make empire of Texas: always on the side J
finding or appealing to local pride is
of no avail.
It is the careful systematic elabo-
rate and half-truthful description in
mail order advertising that has built
up the big mall order business. If the
local merchant will be careful sys-
tematic elaborate and truthful in ail
his local advertising he will win. The
advertiser who is truthful will in the
end get the business.
The public can never know what a
merchant has to sell unless he tells
about It. There Is no better friend of
the merchant and no better Means of
publicity than the local paper. Every
men hunt who carries on a systematic
advertising campaign in bis local pa-
per properly and honestly describing
what he has for sale will find bis bus-
iness In no way affected by mall order
competition
O
Thanksgiving dinner is not going to i
be more costly this year than ever be-
fore as some one has reported it would
be. On the contrary It will be quite a
little cheaper according to the ex-
perts at .the state university.
Not only is turkey cheaper than last
year by about 5 cents a pound but al-
most every other dish niav lie supplied
at a reduced cost. Cranberries are
cheaper by 10 cents a gallon Celery
sells for three bunches for a quarter
where last year you could get only
two. Pumpkins cost about one-fourth
of what they did a year ago. Apples
are from 40 to 60 cents a bushel
cheaper sweet potatoes 20 cents!
lower. Irish potatoes 40 cents per
bushel less.
Oysters cost the saem as last year
and so do ducks but geese have drop-
pel 7 cents per pound from 1911. And
the apple elder that cost 60 cents pen
gallon last year today costs but 2.")
cents.
If in all this Missourians don't liud
something to be thankful for they are
mighty hard to please .loplin Globe.
O
Everybody seems to favor the six
year tenure for the president of the
United States. It would not only limit
the amount of injury a man might do
the country bttt would give more men
a chance lo be chief executive of the
nation.
If the Chieftain should be able some
afternoon to print an item to the ef-
fect that Vinita business men. had got
together and intended to boost for Vi-
nita institutions it would be the news-
pa pi r BOOOp of the season.
O '! U
How fast do impulses travel aloflfc
the nerves? The speed has been dul
measured by the aid of the elaborate
apparatus with which the physiologi-
cal laboratory of today is supplied. In
man the rale has beun set down at
about 114 feet a second.
This measurement has reference to
the rate at which messages of the
bodily telegraph system are sent froai
nerve centers along motor nerves or
those destined to bring muscles into
play. But a second class of nervea
exists in the Body called "sensory
whose duty It Is to convey messages
rrom the body to nerve centers. The
rate of impulse in the sensory nerves
Is quicker than in the motor nerves
Investigators give varying rates from j
about 168 feet to 675 feet per second.
tin average rate being 282 feet.
Physiologists have made careful j
ealc.ulationn regarding what Is called '
our reaction time. Here we endeavor!
to calculate the interval which elapses
between the Impression made on our
organ of sense and the giving of th
signal which rogiater the Impression
an received by the brain and transla'
ed into terma of consciousness. Dif
ferent results due no doubt to the
varyfng nervous capacities of the In
dlvidrrals have been obtained. In on
series the Interval averaged .1087 of '
a second Riid In another .1911.
Signaling to the eye by means of a j
light demanded for Its reception and
demonstration .113!) of a second. In
the case of a sound the interval was
.1360. An electric spark used to stlm
ulate the eye gave as reaction tim
.1377 of a second when the signal was
given by the lower Jaw and . 840 when
Klven by the foot. I
There's A "Want Ad
Audience" Waiting
For Your Message
I
Each classification of tha want ads has its own
special readers people to whom on that particular
day the ads under that classification have especial
interest. N
The people who are look i m; for work read nothing
else in the paper with half the interest and attention
they give to the "Help Wanted" ads.
The people who want to find places in which to live
turn eagerly to the "For Rent" classification and
welcome the appearance of an ad that looks to beworth
"investiyatino;."
The people who are about ready to stop paying
rent read the real estate ads with thepurposeoffinding
the hoped-for home.
The employer whose need of "help" is urgent
turns to the "Situation Wanted" ads in the hope that
the worker he needs has advertised.
With every classification it is the same. There
is a changing "audience" every day but a sure-to-be-interested
one. Thus Jwhen CLASSIFIED your
message goes DIRECTLY to all the people in the city
who on that day have any interest in that sort of
messace!
Does not that fact give you
A REAL OPPOR
TUNITY?
Spice Cake.
Make a cream of one cupful of but-
ter and two cupfuls of sugar. Add
four beaten eggs and stir for five
minutes longer then mix in a cupful
of sweet milk one quarter of a grat-
ed nutmeg one tablespoonful each of
einnamon mace nutmeg and cloves.
Measure three cupfuls of cream of
tartar and one of soda. Sift twice
and stir In with the rest of the In-
gredients. Bake from 40 to SO min-
utes In a moderate oven.
Olive Cherries.
Take as many pint Jars as you want.
Gil each jar one-fourth full of gr.od
vinegar then take ripe cherries cut-
ting off stem leaving them one half
inch long. Then fill the jars with the
rherries put in one level tablespoonful
salt and fill up with cold water; seal
op and they are ready for use In three
weeks. Are fine.
Quince Jam.
Pare the quinces and giate them on
coarse grater add three-fourths of
a pound of sugar to each pound of
fruit and cook slowly for 30 minutes
or until the Jam comes clear from the
pan. Stir and mash often while cook-
ing. Pour into Jars or tumblers.
GARRISON'S
C.O.D. GROCERY
Northern Patatoes
per peek 20c
Northern Potatoes
per bu 75c
Northern Potatoes
by sack per bu. 70c
Northern Potatoes
10 bu. lots 68c
Fancy Cabbage lb. 2c
Eancy Cabbage
100 lbs 1.50
Red Globe Onions
per peck
Red Globe Onions
per bu
Ben Davis Apple
per tm
5 gal. keg Kraut
30c
1.10
70c
1.10
the total number of bank ovtu rs in.
DUaUMu -ux. cpt national baakeiiL
12.52G Mere are approximate)
C.700000 people in the stato who are
affected by a hank failure. Of tots
number approximately one-fifth or 367
000 are voters. It is reeatmable U
: -suppose the voters f this state :ire
noing to permit the repeal of a law
Hint absolutely protects them even
il very banker in the statu demanded
the repeal of the law
will not. HoKldes tl
the state hunkers of
Mjt vote to repeal
he-n hurd'Tsotne. if
been admiu'stered. but it has never-
tneloes proven that the state guaranty
of hank deposits is the only preventa-
tive of depositors' panics and that
it is a principle come to stay. Every
bank fallUTe in Oklahonm has only
They certainly
is a majority of ipopnlatio
Oklahoma would j The tit
his law. it ttatlotilcago i
.. . i
is line as It tins
of the Anglo Snx. ii. carrying across
his back the cross of Calvary i ! his
heart Christ and hfm crucified'"
-O
Mall erder business is that depart-
ment of business w tVrolj. through the
medium 01 advertising merchandise
Is sold direct to the for an titer by mail
This bnsiivss has grown In Iohps ai -1
bounds. Why? Beraoae the local
merchant does not keep pace with the
ittcrvasiiiR demands Of an increasing
jig BUu) order houses e
ilVe on an average of 250-
uue orders a (lay. And tlii enormous
business tomes from communities
whose natural trade belongs to the
local merchant. The local merchant
must make more effort to hold his bus-
iness and get new business of tlx- big
concerns will make greater inroads
lie must beat the mail order houses
Ht their own game. He can do tliia by
Now that this law has proven an Ihnndlinr honest gtxids at honest prices
absolute success from the depositors' hind telliog about the goods In such a
standpoint the proper course to pur-lwny p ople will believe him. fault
la
TYPEWRITER VS. COAL HEAVER
The girl who is operating a type
writer doesn't appear to be doing very
heavy physical labor as compared
with the brawny individual In the
stokehold of an Atlantic liner who is
shoveling coal Into a hungry furnace
but this Is one of the many Instances
in which superficial appearances are
receptive as u comparison of th
force expended by the two will show
The stoker may be credited with
handling one ton of coal per hour. 01
eight tons per day. plus the weight of
hta fho- el Adding the shovel to his
lT.Stit) pounds of coal he expends
about 1090(1 pounds of
each key struck on t
i here Is an expenditure
OYer three ounces of energy or say
one pound to the average word. A
fair operator will average 1500 word
an hour or In eight hours 12.'i0t
words i2000 pound3 of energy. To
throw over the carriage for each new
fine requires on an average three
pounds of force. Twelve thousand
words will make 1000 lines so therf
arc 3000 pounds of energy to be add
ed to the 12.000 making 15000 ponndl
of energy expended which compares
pretty well with the stoker's 20nno
all things considered. A really fast
operator would push the expenditure
of energy in to 25.000 poonda or more
Corn Custard.
After cutting the corn from the cob
anix It medium thick with milk pep
per and salt to taste. Then add three
well-beaten eggs and bake 25 or 80
minute.
Dr. Louis Busby
Offica ml i
Ken. 110 i
Dr. C. S. Ncer
i Oatoe lot
' Ken 4B3
DRS. BA6BY & NEER
in First 'ti it
1i t't Ruildin I
energy For
e typewrit t
of somei lung
E. A. STU3BLEFI ELD D. M. D.
Dentist
ate Reasonable Examination Fret
AC Operations Made aa Painless as
"oas'ble and All Work Guaranteed
oiuuofornj used for Painless Extraction
OFFICE: ROOM 9 SCOTT BU'LDING
R. E. MOSS
Florist
North Avenu rnd Thompson Stree
Pilose i21 and 461
All complaints or tteltrery .uoula
be reported to the Clvcbiauon Depart
at Paeae 44.
FELT BAD
ALL THE TIME
Shellhorn Lady Suffered a Greal
Deal But Is All Right Now.
Shellhorn Ala. In a letter from this
place Mrs. Carrie May says: "A short
time jko I commenced to hare weak
spells and headaches. I felt bad all
the time and soon grew so had I
couldn't stay up. I thought I would die.
At last my kusbar.d got me a bottle
of Cardui and It helped me; so he got
some more. After 1 had taken the
second bottle I was entirely well.
I wish every lady suffering from
womanly trouble would try Cardui.
It is the best medicine I know of. It
did me more good than anything I ever
used."
Cardui la a woman's tonic a
strengthening medicine for women
made from ingredients that act spe-
cifically on the womanly organs and
thus help to build up the womanly con-
stitution to glowing good health.
As n remedy for woman's Ills It has
a successful' record of over 50 years.
Tour druggist sells it. Please try it.
N. B Write lo: Untie' AJ.knrv Dpi.. Chitj-
root Mnikint Co. Chatta itt r-nn.for liptdal
Imtrwtions nd 64-tutir : ok. ' Home TrfitiM.i
'or W.jo" entlBlia ui.ijof.on Kueil
DR. F. L. HU6HS0IN
Physician and Surgeon
Phones 625 Residence 525 W.Delaware
Office Over Wimer Drug Store
JAMES S. DAVENPORT
Attorney-at-Law
Office Rooms 9 & 10 New II
aiat-'ll HlOg
VINITA OKLAHOMA
THEO. D. B. FREAR
Attorney and Counselor-at-Law
Rooms 1 and l. Cherokee Bulldina
DR. F. L. MARNEY
Graduate Veterinarian
Office City Livery
Phone 185 Vinita OKU
DR. A. W. HERRON
Physician and Surgeon
Office In Barrett Building 10SV4 Boa
Wllaon Street.
the Pbone L'63 Residence PhonwJ8
lte!d.ncf M South Adair 9tree
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Marrs, D. M. Vinita Daily Chieftain. (Vinita, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 173, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 19, 1912, newspaper, November 19, 1912; Vinita, Okla.. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc775509/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.