The Okarche Times. (Okarche, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, December 31, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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okarche times WIDE STRIKE POSSIBLE
OKARCHE, OKLAHOMA |
SWITCHMEN BREAK PEACE NEGO-
NEW STATE NOTES
POSTIL DEFICIT GROWl
F. E. Applegate of Muskcxctt. Okla..
has been appointed to a clerkship at
tlie Osase Indian agency.
TIATIONS WITH RAILROADS
OHM ORGANIZATIONS MAY CD CN STRIKE
The Crescent hotel at Erick was
completely destroyed by lire bust j Arrogance cf Railroad Officmfe Cause
week together with all furniture and
waring apparel.
A movement to establish in Okla-
homa City a tuberculosis hospital la
expected soon on recommendation of
Or. T. W. Riley, head of tho city
health department.
Appeal to Federal Govern
merit—Situation it
Serious
SOUTH S LEADER IS DEAD
GREATEST LOSS ON SECOND CLASS MATTER
rihertfT Jesse W. Phillips of Atoka
was seriously wounded in the lower
part of the abdoun n last week In an
< rtort to capture Will Miles, a negro
bootlegger.' ♦
COSTS UNCLE SAM MILLIONS EV-
ERY YEAR TO CARRY MAIL Senator McLaurin of Mississippi Dies
of Heart Failure
Jackson, Miss— United Slates Sen-
ator McLaurin died suddenly at his
home at Brandon, Miss . Wednesday
night.
Death was due to an a'tack of heart
failure and came without the slight-
est warning at 6:30 o'clock. Whan
the fatal stroke came upon him, Sen-
ator McLaurin was seated in a rock-
ing chair in front of the lire in his
library. He suddenly fell forward,
without speaking a word, and life was
members of his family
Loss on Rural Mail Delivery is Con-
stantly GroVIng—Enormous
Deficit Now Confronts
the Government
St. Paul, Minn. Developments Mon-
day in the controversy between the \ •
railroads of. the northwest and tho j Washington.—Confronted ui:h a de-
striking switchmen result'd in a wider fleit of *17,47:1,770, the present admin oxt|]u,( ^
breach than has heretofore exist'd, j Istration of the postofHce department ; rcached *jg "side
Not only have Ihe switchmen de- ! began its operation!-. This w-as tho
Glared all negotiations with the rail- I largest deficit, in
POSTAL SAVINGS BANKS
MEASURE MAY BE PASSED AT
THIS SESSION OF CONGRESS
Noah's Animals.
The Bible has the following t:» say
about the number of animals of oath
i kind which Noah took on board the
ark: Genesis, seventh chapter, sec-
ond verse; "Of each clean boast then
shalt take to thee by sevens the
male and his female, and of beasts
that are not clean by two the male
SPEAKER CURDS WILL KID PASSAGE and his ,fein,ille-" steve"th
i chapter, third verse; “Of fowls also
---- j of the air by sevens, tho male and the
female, to keep seed alive upon the
face of the earth.
Aldrich May not Oppose the Wishes cf
President Taft in the Matter-
Majority is in Favor of
Passage of Bill
... ... The.swift summons of death follow-
Hie history of the , wlthil| a few momenU a remafk
road terminated, but tho labor leaders Postal service. So long as the deficit by Senator McLaurin that he was
say there is a strong possibility of a 1'n the departments aggregated only :t Mien feeling better than he had felt
elalist party. Alfalfa county, announ- | general strike by all or the allied ■few millions of dollars annually, little I at any time since his recent severe
res that he will Is- n candidate for orders belonging to Ihe railway branch | attention was paid to it. hut when, in , Ui'iess. resulting from an attack of
of the American Federation of Labor, jthe Inst few years it leaped to upward i l’t°maine poisoning.
H. 71. Perham, who has been acting as *10,000.000, and (In,illy, in 1000, ox 1 Ab J° *• successor to Senator Mc-
chairman of the railway council In , needed $17,000,000, ''ordinary business
Session here, left Monday night for ] prudence suggested that t hi causes
Washington to seek advice. he definitely located.”
"There may he a general strike,” These are statements in the annual
\. C. Hooffer, lender of the So-
congress in the Second district next
year.
Hoad overseers ot Foraker town-
ship, Osage county, ltavo determined
to -open soetion Ime roads all over
tho township. This action will mean
the. cutting up of some large pastures
and tho cattlemen probably will make
strong opposition.
"Taxes paid prior to Fob. 1 are not
liable to the 18 per centum i>cr an-
• rum penalty,” says Attorney General
» West in a letter to United States In-
dian Agent Dana H. Kelsey of Mus-
kogee
John W. Ashcraft has resigned as
postmaster at Aline,, Alfalfu county,
Oklahoma, and Congressman Morgan
has recommended S. C. Timmons, ed-
itor of the Aline Chronoscopo to fill
the vacancy. »
said Mr. Perham.
Preslednt Hawley, of the switch-
men’s union, asserted:
"Several olher members of the rail'
way council besides Mr. perham. left
for their headquarters to make prep-
erations for a strike of their respec-
tive orders.”
Mr. Perham in speaking of Mon-
day's developments, said:
"Friday we were on fhe verge of n
settlement with the railroads and we
thought the matter would ho fixed up
report of Postmaster General Frank
H. Hitchcock. Concerning the results
of inquiries Into the deficit, ihe post
master general sa.is:
"Roecnt Investigations have shown
that the two great■ sources of loss to
the postal revenues are second-class
mail mutter and rutal delivery.
"The less on second-class mail mat-
ter has been increasing for many
years, until it now amounts to *61,
000,000.
The loss from rural delivery, a ser-
Laurin it is pointed out that an ap-
pointment might foe immediately
made by Governor Noel or selected hr
the state legislature, which will con-
vene early in January.
Senator McLaurin, who was 61
years of :tgo, began his first term in
•he United States senate in 1894, hut
was elected governor of Mississippi
f't 1895 ami served in that office four
years.
He was eleated again ty the - i-
nie in 1900 and served one term, lie
then returned for the term whiclfbe
gan on March I, 1907. Ills present
term of office would have expired on
March 3, 1913.
Senator, McLaurin was a lawyer h.
profession and began the study of
For This One Day
There fk a rumor in Guthrie that*
Mrs. Bird McGuire, divorced wife of
the congressman of that t ame, is
bidding her friends a long farewell,
and in going to New York city to
make that city Iter permanent home, i-iltl of the United States in putting an
end to a controversy that is causing
„ . vlce be*{un hRrdl> « Yen™ ®B° law it, isos, after he had served
Monday. But the railroads presented | and of unprecedented growth, teaches 'hrough the civil war as
as high as twenty-eight miliuns,
-,In tine two Hems alone Ihe pos
i a mysterious change of front and
assumed such atrogance that »v de
cided at once to have nothing more
to do with them.
“As the intervention of the state
authorities has failed, 1 shall seek tho
W. A. Sheahan, trainmaster on the
Panhandle division of the Rock Is-
land, with headquarters at El Reno,
has been transferred to tho position
of trainmaster of the Kansas division,
with headquarters at Herrington,
Kansas.
of more than the entire national de-
ceit of Ihe last fiscal year.
“Simultaneously with the growing |
deficit in tho'postal service, the na-
tion's income suffered last year a ser-
, , , . ions depletiou incident to the ftnar.-
bankruptc* Rnd 8«fferlnK «mong tho dPprwl8ion.
innocent who have no voice in the
Because the district court held that
ihe marriage of Cleveland Grayson
to Deliu Jones was illegal,’ N. M. ,
Schantz of Muskogee, lost a piece of
oil land that he had bought from |
Grayson, said to be worth *50,000.
L Hudson, n Jackson county farm-
er, planted four acres of peanuts last
spring ami has cleared $50 an acre on
his crop, besides getting lots of pas- I the attorney
matter.”
In the confeVence of the railroads
and labor officials the railroad offi-
cials refused to take back all switch-
men at on< e, but agreed to re employ
all those whom tin y have places for.
The offer was immediately rejected by
the labor leaders.
Later in the afternoon President
Hawley* and Mr. Perlmm called on
Uoverpor Kberhardt and asked liitn
to invite the interstate commerce
commission to Intercede. The gover-
nor replied he did not care to act
on this request until he had consulted
general, who was out
a private in
the Confederate army. He was bo n
on March 36, 1848. at Brandon, Miss ,
fa! service now suffers an : initial loss ; and was raised on a farm. He en-
: tered the Confederate army when he,
j was 16 years of age. Seven children
survive him.
When the present session of con-
gress opened, because of illness. Sen-
ator McLauri-n did not go to Wash-
ington. In the senate chamber he
w as known as one of tlie g'rongest
defenders of the south, though not
as radical as some. He believed In
the south, her resources and her fu-
ture, and he never failed to rise to
her defense when she was assailed.
We did some active work oil the
senate committee on 'he Mississippi
Washington.—Speaker Cannon, It
has been learned, has agreed to use
his influence to put a postal savings
bank bill through the house. Sena-
tor Aldrich may not strenuously op-
pcse the passage of such a bill
through the senate. .
President Taft is exceedingly anx-1 For this one day.
ions to obtain postal savings bank leg-
islation. It was at his urgent re-
quest that Speaker Cannon withdrew
his opposition, and Senator Aldrich
agreed not to stand in the way of a
hill that contained certain provisions.
The Rhode. Island senator still
makes it plain that he doubts the wis-
dom of this legislation at this session,
but he is willing to meet the presi-
dent half •way. He has let it be known
that under no circumstances will he
give his support to a bill which do«3
not provide that tho money deposited
i" .pos'al savings bank* shall be
be used for the purchase of United
States bonds . The bill, in its pres-
ent form, is too flexible to suit Mr.
Aldrich.
The Foss bill, which is the official
bill in the house, does not make it
mandatory to invest the deposits in
government bonds. It provides that
funds "may fir deposited in any sol-
vent bank or hanks in the neighbor-
hood ill which the ftftids are receiv-
ed,’ interest at 214 per cent per year
to be paid on the deposits.
If the deposits are refused by local
l-anks, they may be deposited w.:h
the treasurer of the United • States
and withdrawn Or invested in United
B ates bonds or other securities ap-
proved by the savings bank laws of
the state or territory in which the
funds were received.
in the absence of such laws the
funds may be invested in securities of
tin tni'- character as approved for
investment by savings by the laws of
New York or California. Senator Al-
For this one day—
Grant tts sight to see the roud
Creep plainly, on onr winding way.
Grant us s'rength to bear the load.
For this one day.
For this one day—
Guide our feet the road along.
Let not our weary’ footsteps stray
Give us to life a stave of s»ng.
For this one day—
Let us not see the mnd beneath.
But know the gold above the gray
And smell "the wind upon tho heath
For this one day.
For this one day—
When bowed at eve for beniaon.
Grant that upon the uphill way
Our passing smile ’has gladdened'
one, *
On this one day.
—Edna S. Valentine, In Success Mag-
azine. ’
A Financial Epigram.
”11. H. Rogers," said a Now York
broker, "always advised young men ti
get hold 'of capital. He used to point
out to them that without capital a
man could do nothing, nothing. He
used to‘Peck this truth Into a yery
neat epigram. "Fortune,” ho used to
say "can’t knock at the do«r of a
man who has no house.
turage for his pigs.
___ •
At a recent meeting of tho regents
of the state university at Norman
two very important steps were taken.
One was provision for tho summer
session in 1910 and the other the es-
tablishment of a school of education
*for teachers.
Rv a vote of about two to one the
electors of El llcno last week ex-
pressed themselves in favor of the
proposed bond Issue of $80,000. Of
this amount $50,000 is to be expend-
ed in the erection -of a city hall.
of the city. Asked as to how long
it would take to call out a general
strike, if such action is decided upon,
Mr. Perham said: •
"Some of the orders can lie called
out Immediately. There would be
>■•01110 delay in calling out others, ow-
ing (o a difference in the method of
procedure in such ciuies."
The failure of the negotiations at
St. Paul is regarded here as a foro-
runner of a siilar result of the Chicago
conference, at which the territory is
represented.
"Since the opempg of tho adminis-
tration the post mu ter general anti Jit-s
assistants have adopted measures in
conformity with the president's policy
of retrenchment.
"It should be slated wiDi emphasis,
however, that economy is not to be
enforced at the coat of •efficiency.
"Only such measures of .economy
will be adopted, therefore, ns can it"
made a consistent part of a genera! mission in its effor's to release na-
n'l-cei- mi Plumbers Cases Continued
put-iam lien.;] bant, currency from its govern
“The annual loss on third lass mail Guthrie, Okla.- Th« cates against ment bondage.
Is something over three million dob several master plumbers of thin city. \s a result of the assurances
lars. The mail matter carried free un- chnrged with viol ating the ] rovisions (,.lkpr pa,inon am] senator Aldrich
der congressional franks costs the of the labor law, were continued In [ lV(, given President Taft the house
government aiitttinily about a half mil- the superior court here untif Jan- i committee on postoffices and post
lio'rt dollars." »ary The provision which the> roads whlrh hag FoSs bn, in ,ts
were charged with violating is the keeping, will be a ked to report it out
-------------- --- ---- ---;----------- I * • l » 1 All I\ All Lililiwi lilt
i.voi and tributaries and wai a j drich inris's that these provisions ire
bt'r of other important senate coin- L00 ioose]y drawn; that they would
not aid the national monetary com-
| mission
mittees.
Coincidence in Names.
In a New York public school one
of the teachers has four pupils whos*
names art* the same as her own, :tm
the principal and the janitor get each
other's mail for the same mwou. Ar.
other singular thing in this line oc
curred not long ago on the fckLsf uidi
where the clergyman and the raa« and
woman whom he married Tiad fbt*
same name.
Little Neighborliness There.
New York is a big city. A lady who
has not !r ed there lpn r wa ; tovit
to a luncheon given by an old friend
who came from tlie same town sever
al years ago. The new guest met or
expectedly at the luncheon seven of
her sex,.all of whom live within a few
blocks of her residence, and alt of
whom had lived in the town from
which she came.
Alumnae Associations
The i - the<
organization of the kind Tn the worl*
I one forbidding the insertion of adver- scon af>r congress reconvenes on the 1 anii recently Mrs. Emma Kunz
is | tisements for laborers or mechanics
by ! who are expected to take the places
Will Decide Tax Cases
Guthrie, Okla.—Announcement
made that the tax cast s brought
the Western Union and Pullman com of others on strike unless it u stated
panles a year and a half ago, to rc-jth.it there is a strike on
Btrain thf* collection of the 11K)S tax* s,
and which have been pending in the
federal court ever since that time,
will*be decide^ here during tho com
lng week.
4th of January. Whether the bill can ®ade rne P' ( 7i'|f'1't of It. The alnin
Frisco Friiqht Wreckrif
be passed is still- a question.
Doubtless a maojrity of tne senat-
ors and representatives are in favor
of gome sort of postal savings bank
bill, but it is not at all certain that
Arnett, Okla. A Fris-freight ] LiR so drawn as to satisfy amajority
I’rof. Gould, of tho geological su:--
vey. bus discovered*indications of OR , commence read c.m-.e :ivn at
and gas in the Sugar Loaf mountai i ! j„ the Osnge Indian
country or l^e Flore county. Here may
Ic developed a great sweet oil Indus
try. •
Commence Rpad Campaign
Foraker. Okla. The overseern
Foraker township h i \.% decid. «|
commence
country. They
Make $3,000 Dooze Haul
Okniul-oe, Okla. Special Enforce
ment Attorney Hayes and Rnforco-
train was wrecked just ea.;t of this
city on Thuivd.i;. morning, several
ears gopig Into the ditch. No one was
in either branch can be submitted.
Injured.
| mient Officer Fenton swooped down (
of upon the city Wednesday morning*!
De Armond’s Successor Named
Dutler Mo.—C. C. Dickinson, a for-
mer state senator, of Clinton, Henry
county, was nominated by the demo-
cratic convention of tho sixth dis-
nae organizatons lake most active n
terest in tho colleges and school
from which they have been gradu-
ated. At the Smith commencement
the alumnae march almost outranked
the ivy jiroces.skn in importance
piopose to open ill section lines that
are practicable and establish public
highways ther**on.
Killed by Saw Mill
El..lore, Okla.-Will Wheeler of El-
t,‘, oi'.V . n fi , ,1, l fit, <1. > hinds of "I.ii; w'Wl'- ' near 4it*- tnachi.t-1 trl-t as a candlJ.i:,- to succeed the
„ i saw mill, late Congressman De Armond, Thurs-
ted a* 1 was >un«l o day morning,
about $3.odd and rang, d from the West l>i"' - He was a young man and had j The nominaUan was made on the
the ^aw mill. He leave r575th ballot. The convention had
beer. a widow and two small children been in session since Tuesday.
The Mottn'aln, Valley and Plains Zelava Rob-. Nicaragua's Treasury
railway which will ext.-ml from'Uuth WanilKMa. Mlulriz llas ttll
rle to Cimarron, New Mexico. U soon ; tin„. ivitll Z(„.lya.g „a,.(y an„
liar- | xvlielerale arrests among lava’s fol-
to be a thing of reality. W. H.
rington, vice-president of the com-
pany, with a corps of surveyors, left
Guthrie last week to locate the
route of the road between that city
and Higgins, Tex.
Work
Like coral insects, multitudinous.
The minutes are whereof our life >
made;
They build it up, as is the deep blue
shade •
It grows, it comes to light, and Vften.
and thus,
For botSi there is an end. The popu-
lous
Sea blossom- lose, our mtnut*
that have paid
Life’s debt of work are spent, Ik-
work is laid
Before our feet that shall coiuo off* r
us. • .
We may not stay to watch if it wil!
i speed *
hM !°<u<,d the u: ^;;'h' a™Ka;^7;;i(*‘;™; • tTtVekrwTtSTA'rci^vtramcn* ■Tht> b:ir'!''if 111
fifty tnlllinns during his " ',S “...T.V ,. .u " ,-:.>UlTl... I'tudcs 5:60(1 In the reciprocity treaty which ox,dr-I I - h'8
May Not Admit Now States
Washington. Statehood legislation
nt tin present >ession ot'
will not go beyond uivim
Oil Exports Hit by Tariff
Washington.—Alarmed by a drop
congress iran ' oiuiiinicciiiaii » esn * .m*-, .mijui i from one million dollars to $21,303 in
authority F. B. Stearns rind S« irotary Dciuland n.iner.il oil e\ports to Fratiee hi a
V 'd lincstiguMona 1 , ........... t.. 11..., .! .-nttven- I • -d wades r.t ., Aristn.as dinner begun a movemcr
Lodges Feed Poor
Shawn *o. Okla. National Republi-
can Committeeman Cash Cad*-, Mayor
com - t.t Ions, If the wishes ot loading j children. Tho Eagle* spent $600
members of congress dictate tho j to 1 tills one benevolence alone.
According to Secretary Ed Cassidy,
of the school land commission, the
sales department has completed thu j nance. l i t. ideations a: - • i,. mu
preliminary arrangements for the sale strengthened In .-xi. . ntlon of an at-
nt Hie third division of the statu mc-k.
school landtL I’he commission will
probably set March 14 us t!i» day to Shipped Amv for Qur.il
begin.
life. The country Is bankrupt and
*Mndrlz ‘s trying to pit ,!i> govern-
ment on a firm foundation to thwart >"'• T,lia Pro*rnm 1 hRrn 01 wlth
Estrada lie has altvndy grrested Ze- "10 "f C..-si,l, nt Tail
luya’8 son in-1.iw. the minister of lb
j flhnwnee, Ok|n. Trnmn«*nts (»f the
bodies of A. F. lyorr and Henry
\ rigid .investigation of nil public ] Johns, killed in the explosion al'tltu
buildings now being erected under
contract for the state and the com-| were gathered together and shipped j
Muring the liv ic^ion M the Six
tietli ( nigrcoR ihe house passed a bill
to adn • \ M *\ico and ' i i/.on .1
icparate stun a.
Mr. Taft’s recommendations, it is
. id. will - H 1 ’ 1 oxen In; ti- ,
The president urges that "euro be ox*
i Picked In the preparation of the leg*
j islatlon a fleeting each territory, in
,, 1 1 . Uvv order to secure deliberation in the se-
Ro( k Island shops her ) last Friday. .
...................... .................. I...... :, leelicn ot pvr.MUis . . liienih-'is of the
Conductor Is Arrested
\rdmore, Okl 1 E. F. Uelger, who
says he is a railroad conductor, was
1
the reciprocity treaty which expired
Oct. 31 last. Exporters also hope for 1
tin renewal of the treaty with Spain,
a mrge importer of American oil. I
which will expire on Aug.* 31, 1910. I
The exports to t'auada under th * !
operation of the new tariff law, it hi
Buck Garr.'tt, ehuu d with at t :n it - declared will how r itively as great
fraud through the solicitation of I a fulling off in oil exports as those
funds for a p* nniless widow at Dough-. F^onc©.
erty. His petition was generously
t - 1 in Vrdinore.
PW««« or non-compllanoe of tbt pop awR> m, for burial.-Kerr's bodr r°“' ” ’ *
.* .. ....., ~ 9 ......in 1 1 1 1 11.1 • 1 1
itractora with tho prescribed plans
iind specifications Is prumtROd by a
well founded ruin >r that Sii.to An it
tor M. E. Trapp is DCKotlnilng with
a well known architect of the state
to make such investigation.
ATT explosion occurred 4n the Sam
pic* Number Two coal inlno thru
miles from McAlcstor, last week. 11
which, it Is riqiorted. many miners
were hurt.
was sent to Crotton, Iowa, while
Johns was taken in I’aoll. Okla. Thera,
- -1 .....1 of an tnquMt j, " 1 :,n
jleople for their approval n» an elet opinion from Attorney General West
It js believed now that all thoa^
tpjurejl will recover, though some
may be crippled for life.
tlon in which the >>o|e issu • hall be
the nertta of the conatituiioti.’
Presents for Stricken Miners
Chicago, 111.—Twelve Chicago al*
Must Attend Institutes j permen Thursday went to Cherry, 111,
Guthrie, Okla No school teacher {the striekeu mining town where 300
• an get a new certificate in tnis state j miners were entombed last month, to
>>)'!'" be has attended at least • • -,'av Santa Finns jh one thou tud wni-
mul that "such j per cent of the entire term a nor- ,lWS and orphan:, berort by the at.
in com-1 Paul mine disaster.
A full ear load of toys, candies and
fruits for the children and many more
Live sweeMy yet the hero. If hi
star
Doth shine. Work is ifs own b
earthly meed,
Klse have wv none more than * •
sea-born throng
WTm wrought those marvelous
that bloom afar.
—Jean Ingelow
OKLAHOMA DIRECTORY
the incoming »l.- _
j constitution, after adoption by llln con- tanl teachers’ institute, held
Mr,. Fergusun for Postmaster
Washington, Mrs. ’i homos II. For-
■F Mr ii
of erecting :•. litrg< Health harm' t” , f,„. appoint ment is pi tmaatet «l Wn-
Plan Health Sanitarium
San Antonie, Tex.
Fire tn the clothes cleaning estab-
lishment of 0. T. Hpt cr ill Titian last
week threnton.'d tho county court
house and reeorils and caused a panic
ninong the thirty prlsonors in the
i-nunty Jail. Tho tiro started mip-
posedly from an explosion of gasoline
snd resulted In a loss of $8,000.
A. Burton ami A. ?. Hoover of Jack-
sonville, in acquired s iract of
land of about 1,000 acres, 12 tulles
south of Port Lavaca, on tho Gulf o(
Mexico. The men Interested In the
venture will spend about $100,000 In
Improvements n# the tract. The land
has a leap stretch of beach and artq-
slnn water with medicinal properties.
I'nrf of It v 111 be converted Into truck
farms.
to the assistant state si............... iub,unOal gifts for tha a trio km -
of public Instruction. I mothers were taken.
Nice light bread and flaky biscuit,
can !-e made from
CHOCTAW FLOOR
Insist on this brand uu-1 you
are sure to hove the boat
v > it it i • not I It MKI.IX IT
W«IT, TO TH,
Kill too Many Quail
rhick.i.sha, Okla - Report of the first
arrest made In tho stute Gils season
tonga, Okla. Mrs Fergus,m Is the for ,‘XM,edln* ,ho bnK ,lm,t ha*
wife of ex-Govetiinr Fergus „ of Ok r‘''10'U’J 10 Wa,ll''n Askew by J. L.
lahomn. and l„ r uami has beet, men A'nnt ’*• Vcss Davts, Fat,
Honed in connect.,,t with the post-1 M lll('r ,,ml *rHnk * «re charged
„ wi'ti possession of 111 <nt#
j It Is believed thatVut of slate con-
Thackery in Washington i eerns will not attempt to ship out
Washington. Frank Tits, kory and j large quantities of game under the
-.....- 1 N‘'«0"t!.«S"’.5j;ro|y Co-
Indianapolis, Ir.d. Conforming to High Grade Building Material
the avowed policy of helping the j WkoUmItDiitributsriI0LA PORTLAND CEMENT
WHOLESALE LUMBER
wife nf Hhnwuee ire in Washington.
Thackery Is an Indiuti agent in charge
of the Shawnee agency.
new law but will confine themselves
to small shipments and make *hem
more frequent.
Antl-Saloon League 'o enforce, tho liq !
uor laws, the brewers of the state aro
closing many saloons by refusing to
sell beer to them All saloons on the
line bet ween Veedershurg and the dry
counties surrounding It have been
tlosed by this action of 'he Evans-
ville brewers who say they will n ,t
sell any saloon-keepers whose patron-
• AC AO* CAMPIIU BLt'a
_ OKLAHOMA COY
DOCK PS, ATTENTION! 1 "V, * r
U-'roAt f.i.i -, i h|(.((t,MUl«lllj,n
Ul feer in t l i t ent,unit* How t. rum ■ ’.....wo ,r »cu *
• Irs.a. . Hie •—t be,, ,-s»,l,|. f„r t),u |b»M..wi
I »
1 • BROOM M » |W i ■ ||
DEERE IMPLEMENTS
nge conies from counties In which peo- •ndVELIE VEHICLES"1'dttbr
pie have voted dry I CflJCtiK DEERE PLOW CO, OKLAHOMA CIO
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The Okarche Times. (Okarche, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, December 31, 1909, newspaper, December 31, 1909; Okarche, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc858933/m1/2/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.