The Hominy Herald (Hominy, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 18, 1910 Page: 4 of 8
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THE HOMINY HERAI D democratic ticket.
Published Every Thursday
BARRETT & PETERS, Proprietors.
W. K. BARRETT. Editor.
Entered as second class matter March 31, 1910. at
the post-office atHominy. Okla., under act of
gresB of March 3, 1879.
con-
Subscription $1.00 per year in advance. Clubbing
rates with all leading periodicals.
— ■ ■ ■ - _
Telephone 110
For Governor, you will have to pick the winner—
Cruce or McNeal.—Cleveland Interprise
Its a shame to take the money. Lee will win by
40,000.
Another murder was committed in the capital city
last Saturday night when a bootlegger was shot and
instantly killed by an expoliceman. Truly the capi
tal city is maintaining its reputation.
The 60-page booster edition of the Muskogee Phoe-
nix last Sunday was a good one and shows the rapic
rate that paper is making for first place in the state.
The edition will prove of inestimable value to Mus-
kogee. Every copy should be disposed of.
The Tulsa world wants Lee Cruce to challenge
Forty Per Cent Joe to joint debates during the cam-
paign. This will probably be done all right and the
republican candidate will be in no shape to come
under the wire when Cruce gets through with him.
Notice how quiet the republican papers have be-
come in the Gore investigation? Evidently the evi-
dence being turned in is not to their liking. Their
dirty publication of matters entirely foreign to the
question now in hand about Senator Gore has proven
a boomerang to tRem. -
Governor______________________________ Cruce
Lieutenant-Governor--------------J. j. McAlester
Secretary of State---------------„Ben F. Harrison
State Auditor.-----------------^__W. F. Gilmer
Attorney General--------------------Charles West
Treasurer------------------------Robert Dun,op
State Superintendent------------ R. H. Wilson
State Examiner--------------------Chas. A. Taylor
Mine Inspector------------------------^Ed. Boyle
Commissioner Labor-------------Chas. Daughgrty
Commissioner Charities--------------Kate Bernard
Insurance Commissioner.,------------Milas Laster
State Printer.---------------------Giles w Farris
Board of Agriculter___________________G T. Bryan
Corporation Commissioner__________G. A. Henshaw
Clerk Supreme Court.....W. H. L. Campbell
Congressman of Kay County-------C. L. Pinkham
District Judge Distsict No. 24________R. H. Hudson
State Senator District No.9___________S. J. Soldani
Osage County Ticket.
Representative..................._Chas. B. Peters
For County Judge---------------_K. C. Templeton
Clerk of District Court--------------Tom Leahy Jr.
County Clerk------------------------W. J. Boone
Sheriff------------------------------^ p
County Treasurer--------------------J. A. Hunter
Regist of Deeds--------------------T. M. Roaddus
County Superintendent_________________\\\ E. Gill
County Surveyor------------------~H. J, Behning
County Commissioner District No.2_____W. C. Price
Hominy Township Ticket.
Trustee-----------------------------L. D. Souter
Clerk------------------v---------Geo. W. Paxton
Treasurer--------------- .Ge0. E. Huston
Justices of Peace....Frank Tutum, Chas. F. Dodson
Constables.....'-------J. B. Walker, W. O. Hodson
Report of Police Judge.
Hominy, Okla. July 11th, 1910.
To Hon. Board of Trustees, for
Town of Hominy, Okla.
I herwith submit my report as
Police Judge from 9-14-9 to July
1st 1910.
No. of Cato
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
Amt. Col.
$ 5 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
6 00
10 00
10 00
6 50
Fine Aucued
$ 5 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00 •
10 00
. . 5 00
47 Omitted by Pres, of Board of
Trustees
5 00 Stohr' 5 00
5 00 Stohr 5 00
10 00
5 00
5 00
5 00
5 00
10 00
1 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
Coe’s Cash
Grocery...
Phone 25. Free Delivery
Committed
5 00
5 00
5 00
5 00
10 00
1 00
Committed
6 50
10 00
Commited
10 00
We handle Lr.. Celebrated Well-
ington High Patent Flour
We always carry a full line of staple and
fancy groceries, canned goods, etc.
The cotton crop in this section of the state promises
to be the biggest ever produced. The late rains suc-
ceeded by these warm sun-shiny days have assured
tkis crop. Com will also make a big crop while the
pastures have been placed in excellent condition and
will last until late in the season. Certainly Osage
county has been kindly looked after by the elements
this year.
“One thk>g they can’t say about Joseph McNeal
He isn’t a carpetbagger. He came in at the opening.’
—McAlester News Capital. Anotner thing they can’t
say about him is that he has depended upon his
wealth, friendship or “stand in’’ on account of his In-
dian “connections.”—Muskogee Phoenix.
And another thing they wont be able to 6ay
about him will be that he was governor of Oklahoma
during 1911-12.
With the appointing of three new members on the
council the town now has a working force that no
doubt will accomplish something. ’Tis a consumation
devoutly to be wished" at least. There are many
things to be done for Hominy in the next few months
and the Herald sincerely hopes that the council will
take the most important matters up at once. Among
them being the draining of the streets, the eliminating
of the disease breeding mud holes, the cutting of
weeds, etc.
All Jakd Hamon needs to do now is to join the
democratic party. He has made a reputation that
would make the dunghills elect him to any office with
a whoop.—Muskogee Phonenix
Jake’s brand of lying doesnt go in the democratic
party. Jake is a traitor to his friends and is in the
party to which he rightfully belongs. In the begin-
ning of the Gore investigation the republican press of
the state tried to whitewash Jake and blacken
Gore’s reputation, but in this they failed. Now *they
are trying to desert Jake and throw him down. Con-
sisteny, thou are a stranger to most republican news-
papers.
From a white republican’s point of view in the
Muskogee Phoenix, a rapid republican paper which
made a strenuous fight against the adoption of the
grandfather ’ clause at the recent primary:
In an editorial in this morning's Phoenix you say
that uniess the republicans come out and vote that
Oklahoma will soon be classed with the solid south.
It does not make much difference whether they stay
at home or not. If they vote, a great many of them
will vote with the democrats so long as the republican
politicians and the republican newspapers put the ne-
groes in front of the republican party. When you and
Jim Harris and other office seekers preach negro
equaility and plan continually for the vote, I for one
vni join the democractic party, though I have alwa}’s
been a northern republican.
“I am in favor of the Jim Crow law and other laws
to teach the ignorant negro to stay in his place. The
sooner the republican party quits toadying to the ne-
groes in this state, the sooner will this state be repub-
lican.
There are thousands of white republicans in Okla-
homa who heartily endorse the above.
Opinion on the Bristow charges against Aldrich and
Aldrich s answer to them seems to have reached two
eonelusions-that Aldrich himself has plainly implied
that tariff making by the beneficiaries of the duties
by M. F. Fraley
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
5 00
20 00
10 00
5 00
5 00
500
500
500
10 00
10 00
500
500
500
5 00
5 00
500
10 00
25 00
500
5 00
10 00
10 00
5 00
10 00
500
10 00
200
500
500
5 00
500
10 00 .Stood good for
cleared himself of having indulged in
------------ uim wcicuy VlUJUling £
hitherto fixed and unalterable personal policy, indi-
cates that even Aldrich sees that what once was re-
garded as an acceptable conventionality in t;
dal.
being applied to the tariff—Kansas City Times.
63
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86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
shal
102
10 00
10 00
Commtited
10 00
10 00
10 00
10 00
500
20 00
10 00
5 00
5 00
4 50
5 00
Stohr 5 00
10 00
10 00
5 00
5 00
5 00
Stohr 5 00
Stohr 5 00
Stohr 5 00
10 00
25 00
5 00
Commited
io bo
10 00
500
Commited
500
10 00
2 00
'5 00
5 00
. 500
We appreciate your trade and will always
give you satisfaction.
Highest market price paid
...country produce...
5 00
Dismissed by request of Mar-
The Osage Eagle that flapped its wings so vocifer-
ously a few weeks ago has exhausted its flap ointment
and v:ll from hence forth be known only in history
as Oi.e of the ambitious youngsters which met a pre-
mature death. It haB been swallowed up, feathers
and all, by the News Republican.—Osage Journal
You’re off your base, brother. The Osage Eagle
done the devouring and we simply changed the name
Eagle for the Herald because the Eagle’s politics
didn’t fit the present editor. The Herald promises
you that it will prove no mean rival to the Journa
as the News-Rep. did, and in a friendly way in start-
ing tve want to ask you to keep record straight.
The band boys have petitioned the city council for
tiie right to erect a neat band stand and place it some
where along one of the prominent streets. This
proposition should be met by the councle at once by
granting the boys the use of any one of the side
streets around the corner off Main street. We have
the best little band in the state and it should be en
couraged in every way. The citizens should cheer-
fully throw in and raise enough to build them an up-
to date band stand.
The question of good roads is one of untold import-
ance. It has been considered, from time to time, by
the press, but only in a fragmentary way, and never
as it has really merited. It is not affirming too much
to say that the bad condition of the roads entail a
heavier burden on the farming community than do
ail the taxes of county and State combined. The
waste of time, the wear and tear of wagons, the ex-
cessive work of horses, the loss of opportunity ^o take
advantage of high markets, and the cost to keep the
roads even in their present condition, are appalling
to consider. But the farmer is not the only loser.
The manufacturer, the merchant, and in fact ever
class are affected by bad country roads. The public
roads are of paramount interest to the people at large;
they belong to the State, and should be systematically
built and cared for by the State. The great volume
of trade in the State is the common road trade. It
exceeds, by millions of tons, the tonage of all the
rairoa ’j combined.
The frauds being unearthed in the McMurray inves-
tigation shows how the republican bosses at Wash-
ington have handled the affairs of the Indian in the
past. The Gore expose will undoubtedly help some,
but it comes too late to save the red man. New
scheme swill be hatched and new men found at Wash-
ington to help take the last dollar poor Ix> has got.
The Oklahoma City Times goes into editorial rhap-
sody over its friend Jake Hamon. Jake may be all the
Times claims for him, and yet it is a fact that Jake
is so crooked he could swallow a nail and spit up a
corkscrew. But then, you can’t hardly blame Bene-
dict for sticking up for his friend.
“Uncle Joe’’declares he will be a candidate again
for speaker of the house. Lncle Joe has caused as
much excitement lately as Halley’s comet did, but he
is as surely disappearing.
1 shal
103
500
500
104
5 00
5 00
105 Dismissed by request of Mar-
106
5 00
500
107
500
5 00
108
500
5 00
109
500
5 00
110 Dismissed failing to prosecute.
Ill
5 00
500
112
10 00
10 00
113
10 00
Committee
114
5 00
Committee
115
5 00 (J. B. Walker)
116
5 00
5 (Jo
117
1 00
Committee
118
1 00
1 (JO
119
5 00
5 00
120
10 00
Committed
121
10 00
10 00
122
Dismissed
Stohr
123
Dismissed
Stohr
124
Dismissed
Stohr
125
5 00
5 00
126
5 00
Committed
127
SOU
5 00
128
1 00
1 00
129
5 (JO
500
130
10 00
Stohr 1 00
131
1 00
Committed
132
500
Committed
133
5 00
500
134
5 00
5 00
135 .
5 00
1 50 ‘
136
5 00
5 00
137
5 00
Committed.
Total
collected
- - $507 50
Amount paid Tr.
- - - 300 00 o
Bal.
Due City -
- - - 207 50 0
Credit by Stohr -
- - - 31 00 .
Due City July 1, 1910
—---—■ 8
- 176 50 i
The election board completed the official count of
the primary elections held August 2nd. The count
shows that Cruce received 56.051; Murray, 40.700;
Ross,27,820; Kirk, 2,010.
Clean Up That Gun.
It is now time to shoot snipe,
plover, curlew, luck, goose, brant
crane and swan. All you need is
a hunting license and some powder
and shot.
Prairie chicken season opens up
--j September 1 and continues for two
Insurgency is a germ once firmly implanted it is montI>9- Quail season opens the
The democrats in Osage county will come under
the wire in the November election 300 to the good,
’he stars read that way brother, and there is no get-
ting away from it.
statement is correct to best of n
knowledge.
G. K. Sutherland
Police Judge.
Coe’s Cash Grocery
West Main Street, Hominy, Oklahoma
BLACKLEG0IDS
•f
A
THE SIMPLEST, SAFEST, SUREST AND QUICKEST
WAT TO VACCINATE CATTLE AGAINST BLACKLEG.
Nodose to measure. No liquid tosplll.
No strlng to rot. Jait a uttu piu f0 pll#td
under the skin bj a alnfla (brute of the instrument.
An Injector Fro# with a Purchase of 100 Vaccinations.
* Liters tar* Free—Writs for tft.
WESTBROOK’S
DRUG STORE
The
1Vest Main Street,
'oxoJUL st,
ore
Hominy, Oklahoma
*
MRS. P. C. SIMONS I Tele9p4
one
I have opened a new anc uptodate Pressing
and Cleaning shop which will be known as
the
Home Pressing
...Club...
Ladies and Gents Suits cleaned, pressed and alter-
ed. Satisfaction guaranteed. Front room, over
the R.-F. Mercantile Company.
Fourth Annual State Fair. A I DD| M C
At Oklahoma City, September 27 I ^
The great live-
agricultural and
industrial
Daily air
k snow, racing each day ex-
Sunday. Send for premium
ist and make an exhibit. I. S
AUCTIONEER
Sells everything and gets the High
Dollar.
HOMINY, - OKLAHOMA
SALE EVERY SATURDAY P. M.
Holiness Camp Meeting.
The Holiness people are holding
ominy at the Mound Valley
o\ house. The meeting wil
about ten days. Everybody is
invited to attend and bring their
friends. Rev. D. M. Clouson will
have charge of the services.
Lost Watch.
One \\ altham, 15 jewel, silver
case, near Hominy. Reward to
tinder returning same.
A. J. Dildine.
uiturgeucy is a germ once firmly implanted it is months. Quail season opens the
impossible to get rid of, as the republican party will middle of November and extends to
find to their sorrow in 1912. " he first of r bruary.
M. W. MEANS
Harnessmaker
Handmade Harness A Specialty. North
Side West Main.
Publication Notice.
of Osage
In the District Court
County, Oklahoma.
J. G. Copeland, Plaintiff, vs H
r’,Mwa/ty’ Mar>’ K- McCarty,
Lela McCarty and Mary B. Re-
mine; Defendants.
1 o the above named defendants;
Wi will take notice that you
luvebeen sued in the above named
Court by the above plaintiff, for a
recovery of money on a promisorv
note and that unless you answer
the petition filed by the paintiff in
said Court by the 23 day of Sep-
tember 1910, said petition will he
taken as true and judgment grant-
lng to the paintiff, a judgement
for $300.00, atty fee $30.00 and Int,
at 10 per cent rendered according
to the prayer thereof.
Witness my hand and seal of
T" lV 1910^ ^ ^uy °* August.
Thos. Leahy Jr,. Clerk.
f), m ^ret* Deputy.
Lhas, M. Cope, Attorney for Plain-
■
I
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Barrett, W. K. The Hominy Herald (Hominy, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 18, 1910, newspaper, August 18, 1910; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc848254/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.