The Hominy Herald (Hominy, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 15, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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TARIFF LAW TRICK
8AMPLE OF HOW CONSUMERS
ARE SOBBED.
Women Especially Interested In This
Case, Which Has So Vitally Af-
fected the Cost of Their
Dress Goods.
WASTING THE PUBLIC MONEY
Figures Show
Burdens Upon
Country by Republican Ex-
travagance.
Since I860 the
you-;
of caustic
pay more than
a
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Yours for uni-
formity.
Yoars for great-
est leave□in g
power.
Yours for never
failing results.
Yours for purity.
Yours for economy.
Yours for every-
thing that goes to
make dp a strictly
high grade, over-
dependable hairing
powder.
That is Calumet. Try
it once and note the im-
provement in your bak-
ing. See how much more
economical over the high-
priced trust brands, bow
much better than the ch-yn
and big-can kinds.
Calumet is highest in quality
—moderate in cost.
Highest Award-
World’s Pure Food
Exposition.
BUSY THEN.
Not long after the present tariff law
became effective a man ordered some
new shirts. He had been paying
! *2 25 ai*ece, but the shirt maker told
him he would have to pay $3, because
the goods he wanted had a few strips
of mercerized cloth in it. All bis
shirting material, he said, cost him
S3 1-3 per cent, more than the previ-
ous year if it had any mercerized
threads In It. Where there were any
figures woven In the piece the ad-
vance in price was greater. When
women buy dress goods which have
been mercerized or have mercerized
threads In them—threads which have
been dipped in a solution
soda—they have to
they did a year ago.
Who did this, and why. and how
^•as It brought about? These ques-
tions are fully answered in an article
by Samuel M. Evans In the World’s
work. Senator Aldrich was the mas-
ter workman. But for his adroit man-
agement in the senate and in con-
ference committee the changes in
schedule I—the cotton schedule—
; which have so plagued consumers,
would not have been made.
Senator Aldrich did not do all this
of his own motion. He acted at the
Instigation of two of the leading
i Rhode Island cotton goods manufac-
turers. One of them was the author
of the cotton schedule of the Dingley
law. and was on the whole satisfied
^Ith It. But there were some para-
graphs which the Supreme court had
interpreted more liberally than he had
meant they should be. He viewed
with alarm the slightly Increased Im-
portations of some kinds of goods. So
he and his associate wrote the
amendments they wanted adopted-
slight additional changes 6imply de-
signed to meet legal questions." If it
had sot been for the vigilance and
tenacity of the senate Insurgents all
the "slight changes" suggested would
have been smuggled or bulled through.
Most of them were.
national
550 per
population of tho
l nited States has increased 1S6 per
cent., while the expenses of
government have Increased
cent.
during Democratic administration
the appropriations for two years dur
Ing the Fifty-third congress amounted
° 591-.013,523.34; a Republican ad-
ministration during the Sixtieth con
appropriated $2.052,799.400.G8 for
Since 1896 the war department ap-
propriation has grown 335 per cent,
and the navy appropriation 365 per
cent. v
Large additions to the salaries of
public officials, from the president
down, expensive new bureaus, com-
missions, and courts, have enormous-
-T lncreased the general expenses of
resubmission
IN NOVEMBER
PEOPLE TO VOTE ON TWO CONSTI-
TUTIONAL AMENDMENTS
A HARD FIGHT PREDICTED
Governor Issues Call for Election on
Amendment to Do Away With
Prohibition in Oklahoma—
Woman Suffrage Also Up
PROMISED
LIVELY TIME
Mark
Twain’s Outline of Editorial
Policy He Had Made Up His
Mind to Adopt.
Oklahoma City. Okla.—Governor
Haskell last Saturday issued a procla-
mation calling an election on the pro-
posed constitutional amendment to do
with
___________ Ub ™ay Prohibition in Oklahoma
government. The whole history of Re- f- . substltute local option and high
publican administration has, been one
otg.' of frightful extravagance.
license therefor.
Another proclamation
was also is-
The Sixtieth congress, ami the Taft 8Ue(1 cal,inK election on the amend-
i _.«_ « 4 444 ^ mcnf in — a. a.\
administration, pledged to economy uut lue wora "male,"
has already put 26,944 tax-eaters on , 7. g- the women of the state the
the public pay roll at an annual total F‘t\V° V°te‘
cost for salaries of $24,943,276.10. The ‘ ne ROVernor made no comment up-
White House expenses this year are th_? nlatter of w°man suffrage, but
$135,358 more than they were In 1894 ?SUtd a lengthy statement regarding ----
under Cleveland, and three vessels are <he °ral option matter, in which he , Pn'chr|8tlan and degrading. I shall
detailed from the navv to serve as g°®8 im° ,he hlstor>r of the movement 1 often meddle with politics, be-,
aa and makes various comments. cause we have a political editor wh
The date of the elections is Noveni- l alreadT excellent and only needs
ber 8, the same date * '
which the regular state
be held.
mont to strike out the word
Mark Twain took the editorial chair
the B,imUo Express in August,
9, and this Is the paragraph In
which he made the Tiers acquaint-
ed with his new .onsibility: "I
only wish to assmo p^ri es having a
nendly Interest in the prosperity of
this Journal that I am not going to
hurt tho paper deliberately and inten-
tionally! at any time. I am not going
to Introduce any startling reform or In
any way attempt to make trouble. I
am simply going to do my plain, un-
pretending duty—when I cannot get
out of it. I shall work diligently and
honestly and faithfully at all times and
upon all occasions—when privation
and want shall compel me to do so.
In writing I shall confine myself to the
truth, except when It Is attended with
Inconvenience. I shall wltheringly re-
buke all forms of crime and miscon-
duct, except when committed by the
party Inhabiting my own vest. I shall
not make use of slang or vulgarity
upon any occasion or in any circum-
stances and shall never use profanitv
except In discussing house rent and
taxes. Indeed, upon second thought,
I will not even then, for it is Inelegant.
v- m
AFTER
DOCTORS
_
FAILED
LydiaE. Pinkham’s Vegeta-
ble Compound Cored Her1
Knoxville, Iowa,—“I suffered with
pains low down in my right Hide for *
year or more and was so weak and ner-
vous that I could not do mv work. I
wrote to Mrs. Pink.
ham and took Lydia
E. Pinkham’s vege-
table Compound
Pyls, and
while eight
are at his
yachts for the president
government automobiles
disposal.
Republican extravagance Is piling
the burden of taxation higher* and
higher. The great part of this burden
falls on the farmer, the workingman,
the small home owner. The only sal-
tation Is a return to Jeffersonian sim-
plicity. and retrenchment of expenses
as that upon *er™ n tbe Penitentiary to be perfect,
election will 8hall not write any poetry unless I
conceive a spite against the
Saturday morning the Rev. George bers‘
and Liver! _______
am glad to say that
your medicines and
kind letters of di-
rections have dona
more for me than
anything else and I
had the nest physi-
cians here. I can
do my work and rest
I believe there is noth-
Pinkham remedies.” —
Th« success of Lydia E. Pinkham’a
well at night,
ing like the
used with perfect confidence by women
eubscri-
D. Conger, superintendent of the Okla-
homa Anti-Saloon League, and a num-
ber of ministers and other prohibition
workers were closeted with the gover
TINY BABY’S PITIFUL CASE
Our baby when two months old
by a Democratic congress, ZlTe S" * Pe"Uad* ““ DOt t0 I SrtE
can. and will, lighten the burden.
eczema
Just
so the burglar might say:
What the Lord permits he ordains.
AH that I can get away with is mine
by divine right.” President Baer of
the Reading claimed divine right to
mulct coal consumers. Probably Sen-
ator Lodge claims to rule Massac.hu-
■etts by right civtne. As for Aldrich
in Rhode Island—just look at tho
state.’
Perhaps Senator Aldrich will now
come forth from his elastic retirement
and explain how the shutting down of
still more cotton mills is wholly for
the benefit of the American workman s
American standard of living.
from head to foot, all over her body
respective sides of the
question, and both filed briefs with
him.
It maybe
who .ullef fro» EE
mation.ulce ration, fibroid tumors, ir-
regularities, periodic pains, backache,
bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indil
Son!011* <“zz*neS8» or nervous prostr*.
mattered pimples. They would break
the skin and peel off leaving the un-
_The?o«rnor.,act,oncomesoni)..a[ ■*£«*>««* It .or.
standard remedy for female ills, and
suffering women owe it to themselvt n
to at least give this medicine a ' t->;
Proof is abundant that it has <■
thousands of others, and why sh
not euro you?
If yon want special advice write
Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for it.
At is free and always helpful.
more pimples
‘INTERESTS’ ARE WIDE AWAKE
Wall Street’s Hand Seen In Proposed
Merger of Guatemalan
Railways.
ter long months of litigation and effort would appear and spread all over »h
FREE
Wage Earners and the Tariff.
The Republican
The Private Citizen-A general has
an easy time after the war is over
The General—Xot for very long,
though. 1 ou soon have applications
for your autograph and invitations to
banquets.
Does Engineering Work.
Mile. Bandurin is superintendent of
an engineering firm in Russia. She
was graduated from the Women’s
Technological Institute in St. Peters-
burg, and has had practical expe-
rience in engineering. She built a
steel warehouse for an army co-oper-
ative society, has been assistant en-
gineer in building a bridge across the
be\a and has done other important
work
Misdirected Energy.
Low did the street car company
come to firo that old conductor? I
thought he had a pull?”
'He did; but he didn’t use it on the
cash register.’’—Christian Advocate
Sprouting Up.
I>on t you think. Mary, you are too
old to play with the boys."
No. mamma; the older I get. the
better I like them.”—Judge.
There is
genius and power in per-
sistence—Orison Swett Harden.
party gives three
reasons for its support of the protec-
tive tariff tax—infant industries,
higher wages and difference In the cost
of production, a3 compared with other
countries.
The first is a deception and a fraud.
There are no industries in our land
that need protection now. for those
industries that cannot stand alone
never will 6it upright unaided and it
is financial folly to subsidize them.
As to protection enabling us to give
a higher wage than we could other-
wise do, the men who purchase this
protection tax do It for themselves
alone and will keep every cent of
it to spend on their passions or to
add to the colossal money power.
There is no real difference In the
cost of production. The proof Is that
our manufacturers now sell their pro-
ducts in foreign markets while com-
peting with foreign cost of production
and could sell even more cheaply If
freed of the 50 per cent tariff tax so
benevolently levied in their favor by
our national lawmakers.
Labor Is cheaper In Europe only
seemingly. In dollars and cents it
appears cheaper, but In substance
in the necessities of life, there is no
difference. For labor in all lands
must be fed and clothed or It cannot
work. Labor in Europe is as well
fed and clothed as it is here. *
How long will "government of the
peoples for the people and by the peo-
ple" be defrauded, deceived, hum-
bugged ?
( The merger of Guatemalan rarivaya
into a consolidation controlled oy ihe
Guatemala Central Is alluded to by
financial organs In the east as “an-
other step In the Pan-American sys-
tem which is to bind South America
more closely to the United States
and open up to us the great Latin-
American market."
Thoughtful Americans, however, are
apparently justified In regarding the
Both sides are prepared to make a quarter of an inchMel Tt“
strong campaign on the question, and ful to see so small a babv T
so near is the election that neither will did. Imagine! The
lose any time in
guns.
firing the opening to
Imagine! The doctor was afraid
put his hands to the child.
S«nd postal for
Free Package
j of Pax tine.
***** and more economical
than liquid antiseptics
FOB ALL TOILET USES.
The woman suffragists were busy all JaneV^^1 doctors'remed*8 but all
‘‘Then
•Tirough the summer of 1909 securing
tfiat they were insufficient, but the wo-
we decided to try Cuticura.
Cuticura Ointment we
:ab and it came off. Un-
this, where the real matter was,
men won out in a hearinsr before *aSl!in-g the Cutlc“ra Soap
late Bill Cross, secretary of Cutlc"“ Ointmeot.
sissr-TErot an“ *rb f, s
|ave baby f°ur drops of the Cuticura
Like the anti-prohibitionists, thev Resolvent' Pleura
new move not so much a precursor ot we‘* disappointed ir *>-f>ir hope that a three 1 dai y’ After
greater trade with South Americr. is r al election v. oun,
foreshadowing the execution ot pia
of American railroad magnates to pre-
vent any possible rate competition b*
the Panama canal.
With Wall street in control of
South American railroads leading to
the coast, steamship rates will not be
a factor In through freights to or
from the United States by wav of the
big ditch.
Even under federal government
ownership of the Panama railway,
days you could see the baby
5 ft* 0-‘ matte.
-ailed to set- gaining a 11,Ue skin which would peel
-men are thorcughlv organized hfhvTA ^ underneath- Now the
V optimistic overp?ct’ro oTaTt,',,^'
ucx. ss. For months thev have hart iJl i, , lltUe baby and
>. force of stenographers and others at cura^ ♦°»IyhU8ed on« cake of Cu«*
DAXTINE
* TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Give* oh a iwwt breath; clean, white,
germ-free teeth—antiaeptically «-I**w
mouth ud throat—purifies the breath
after smoking—dispels all diitgreetbla
perspiration and body odors—much ap-
preciated by dainty women. A quick
remedy for eore eye* and catarrh.
A little Paxiine
awe raxtrne powder (fi*.
solved in a glut of hot water
work in their headquarters and everv tW° of Cutlcura Olnt-
day the leader. ment “«* one boi. j of Cuticura Re-
If people would know what
jnake* ■ delightful awtL-pfic
luttoo, p manning eztraoidiaaty
cleandng, germicidal and >»»*(-
iog power, and absolutely harm.
{***• Try a Sample. 50c. a
large boa at druggie* or hy ntafl.
[Thc Paxton toiletOo.
day the leaders declare ihey -.imp , X,"
........ ” JSLJ— SSL ..Crwee* b. ,UIer.
Borrow, Mas*.
cannot lose.
er, socialist and labor vote will be for
them to a man.
ists
_________ : w,tb eczema. Mrs. Joseph Koss-
On the other hand, the ami-suffrag- Ueiehti,‘ s V?'1,8,!’18"' Ridgewood
s seem to have no well founded -- I Ueighta’ N’ Y- Apr- 30 and May 4. ’09.”
eifle
rates have been fixed by the Pa- Sanization, but it is asserted the heavy
: Mail Steamship company, which ^oreign vote in the state is practically
is owned by American railroad inter- unanimous against the suffrage move-
ests. Unless some means be found ~‘L .....
to prevent American rail kings from
controlling South American railroad1
and steamship lines, the Panama
canal will hardly prove a strong lm- j
pulse to trade development.
ment. Just who will head the "anti”
movement is not known.
Wall street may be a little nervous
about possible tariff revisions, but it
probably isn’t any more nervous than
the old guard, which fears a siege in
the citadel of protection.
Marshal Shot in Street Duel
Fairfax, Okla.—In a pistol duel here
Saturday night Marshal James Murphy
was shot and seriously wounded bv
Norris Watkins. Murphy had arrested
Not Impregnable.
Horace Avory, K. C.. just appointed
a judge, is one of the mordant wits of
the British bar. One day cross-ex-
amining a recalcitrant witness he
asked:
“What are you?”
A retired gentleman,” proudly as-
serted the ex-cheesemonger.
•Well,” snarled Avery, “when
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
CARTER’S LITTLE
UVER PILLS
gently but firmly <
you
Watkins earlier in the day for drunk- acb*eved -the position of gentleman
enness and locked him in jail, but he wby dfd you retire from it?”
pel a Uxylirarta
do it* duty,
fc Cure* Con.
succeeded in
Brings
Cheer
to thc breakfast table—
Post
Toasties
with cream.
Crisp, golden-brown
“crinkly” bits, made
from white corn.
A most appetizing, con-
venient, pleasurable
brealdast.
“The Memory Linkers’
Aldrich Now in the Fire.
Clearly Senator Aldrich did not
make things more comfortable for
himself when he jumped out of the
frying pan. The first apology of his
life has aggravated his plight.
Aldrich s elastic explanation about
rubber has not satisfied the country,
and he has made no answer at all con-
cerning lead and cotton. Wbea a man
is assailed silence is better tljan un-
convincing utterance.
The country knows that the rubber
Interests are closely allied. It be-
lieves that a movement was under
way when the Bristow sensation was
sprung to form a gigantic trust for
the encompassing of ail the rubber
business production and manufac-
turing. on the solid foundation of the
Aldrich tariff. It knows that thl3 com-
bination already had attained such
magnitude that prices, fpstered by a
wholly superfluous tariff, which had
been increased by Aldrich, had great-
ly advanced. It believes that Aldrich,
his son and his financial associates
profited by this general stimulation of
the rubber business. The essentia'
facts undenying this public knowledge
and this public belief are admitted I
by the Rhode Islander.
The public has not ceased what
I..r, Aldrich calls “prating about the
Moral aspects of the tariff."
Aldrich’s Untenable Position.
It Is certainly true that the position
occupied by Senator Aldrich during
the work of tariff revision is repug.
nant to a nice sense of honor. The
statesman who gives his name to tar-
iffs cannot afford to give it at the same
time for the use of a business that is
to be helped by the tariff, even indi-
rectly. He cannot afford to be known
as an investor whose dividends may
be swelled by tariff increases, h.
cannot afford to be known
ness agent of other men In
breaking jail. He went
to his home for his gun and came back
armed with an automatic pistol. Rid-
ing up the street he saw Murphy and
opened fire, hitting him in the shoulder
and seriously wounding him.
of my
Outlining Treatment.
"I want you to take care
practise while I’m away."
"But, doctor. I have Just graduated.
Have had little experience/*
”\ou don't need it with my fashion-
Ardmore Okla u *6 patients F*nd out what they
vo „/, rter county wU1 bave beea ^ting and stop it. Find
•tipatioa,
Indigo*-.
tioi^
Sick ^ i
Headache, and Distress after
- J”*H Dee*, a—n Me#
Genuine outhu Signature
Carter Leads in Indian Corn Seed
W. L. DOUGLAS
SHOES
have more seed corn than
county of the state, according to a
statement made by A. G. Graham, dis-
trict agricultural agent. Mr. Graham
sajs that more fanners have followed
the plans of the
any other out where they have been summering
and send 'em somewhere else.’
TO DRIVE OCT MALARIA
I,°.V.k.ru,w Ton are takm*.
as the bush and cuUiS™^ Tat
i congress. <he bo>'8' corn clubs have a greater IVU2?1
lAklnjf.
bottle.
To say this is to say that sacrifices acreaSe here than in an/other ^untZ
rp dpmnnriorl rvf u... _ in tho ___. . . J __
the system.
taste-
malaria
Sold by ail
are demanded of him. since the tariff in the 8tare- aad he estimates that this
reaches far. but to keep their charac- c?unt>’ wi” have ten thousand bushels
Few Marriages In London.
HAND-SEWED
PROCESS ______
BOYS’ #a.00, *2.50 Sl $3.00
THE STANDARD
FOR 30 YEARS
They are absolutely the
»o*t popular and beatahoea
for the price in America.
They are the leaders every-
where becaua* they hold 1
tfieir shape, ft Setter,
look better and wear lon-
ger than other makes.
They are positively the '
fairs as Is demanded is surely not too have been followed that big healrhv
rrrpftf a nrino trx t 1 (iiirc rxf _ ____ . 11J
S?reat a price to pay for leadership.
Senator Aldrich, however, has never
been the leader of the people. As
he leader of the senate he has been
the servant or the ally of the inter-
ests. -He has not scrupled to repre-
sent the Interests when he should
have represented the people. As dic-
tator of tariff schedules he has pre-
sented a travesty of popular govern
ment and done what a man more
senslth i to the calls of honor and
duty would have shrunk from doing
t is for this reason that Insurgencr
will continue to make headway against
him. though it may fall to make good
of some particular indictment.
ears of corn nave been raised.
Single Binder cigar.
Tin Foil Smoker
Package, 5c
Declares Company a Trust
Jefferson City, Mo.-Commissioner
Theodore Brace has filed his report in
the ouster suit against the Interna-
tional Harvester company of America I
and has sustained the quo warranto 1
information of the attorney general.
He found that the company is a trust !
m violation of the anti trust laws of
Missouri and that its charter should
Original
straight.
There Is a duty of pleasure as well
as a pleasure of duty —Silas K. Hock-
ing.
be forfeited.
THE GENERAL DROUTH OF. 1910.DID.NOT*TOUCH
SPUR FARM LANDS
Taft and the Tariff.
Mr Taft started off with the wrong
foot on the tariff revision, writes 3
G Lowrv in Harper’s Weekly H>
hacked the wrong jockey In the race
between the Protected Beneflclarv
Vr- Aldrich up. and the Ultimate Ton-’
* ’ mer, ridden by a political aper^n- !
rice boy nam^d Ins
t"'’ed Bene!
rgent. The Pro-
n. as he always
won. bet the crowd was th<
:ar;
Paving Company Fined
Norman, Okla—The Parker Wash-
ington Paving company was fined $100
and costs here for violating the state
labor law. The company was charged
with Baying workmen $1.75 per day,
when the law required *2 a day. The
trial wa3 attended by State Labor Com-
missioner Charles Daugherty and A*
sistant W. G. Ashton. The
feels or o|ens a like suit
*tnP¥*nd protperou*. Actual settiers ca” * COMn»rr excellent
430,000 acres oi Jiod in Dickcoi K<-/ r^ i. *ke ,c*eotI°n» now from
prices I rots 912.00 to 917.50 per acre “d'Oer** Counties, at
one. ,wo. three, lour, ^7°’ b"“*- 2
The opportunity of ■ lifetime for farmers nf ^** ’or be<orc maturity,
themselves oo fine farms on easy terms SnlMdiH***" n,e*Q* *° ««nblish
jutely bo boll weevil. Spur, the most «Dect?«e^U^ °?,'°^ °<»ontry—*b*o-
•n center of tract. Hesithr, brscin* chm-Te ‘-Kt”- r°L*d ,OWn in T**«.
will double in value in a short »■ * ** oomin^ country
Ibroa^i ,belu>d». Fr.. 73*7“" V*""
loser
case af-
very man
mployed at Uke labor by the
| >^ny.
com
CHAS. A. JONES
\
- • • 'PUR,'DICKENS'COUNTY, TEXAS
Musa rua g. M. IwtxtM , ^
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Barrett, W. K. The Hominy Herald (Hominy, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 15, 1910, newspaper, September 15, 1910; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc848333/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.