The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 109, Ed. 1 Friday, September 2, 1910 Page: 4 of 4
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PA OK FOtTB
THF SH WN !IC WKWH. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1910
THE NEWS THREE ■MOWTHS S1.9S.
HAILED TEDDY
AS NEXT PRES.
KANSAS OITVA1SS HAVE TKDIIY
K(M SIMU OI.l WEI.*
(MUSE.
Kansas City,. Sept. 2. — As the*
guost of bouor of the Kansas City
OommiirciaV Club, Theodore ttooso-
velt drank a toast to the president,
was himself toasted as the "first
cltiien of the United States," and
listened to a rollicking mug to the
tune of "In the flood Old .Summer
Time,' which ran, as follows:
"At next election time,
At next election time.
Roaming 'round the woolly west,
Getting things in line,
For wo like him and he likes us,
And that's a very good sign.
That he will be our pros-i-dent at
next election time."
' The colonel roaponded heartily to
the toast to the president, but looked
on statuseaue as the references to
himsolf were made.
Another song ending with the re-
frain, "For He's Insurgent Through
and Through," he said coud have
been improved In "technical accura-
cy" if the word ''progressive" had
been substituted for the word "Insur-
gent."
"Don't get tho bridle off." said the
oolouel, amid cheers.
Three hundred men attended the
luncheon and gave Colounl Roosevelt
• noisy welcome.
Before the guests were seated,
former Representative William S.
Cowherd, who was toastmasler, said:
"It Is always the custom of the
Commercial Club to drink the first
>asl to the president of tho United
lies."
Among the guests were Governor
Hadley of Missouri, Clifford Plnchot,
Raines R. Garfield, Col. W. R. Nelson,
proprietor of the Kansas City Star;
Senator Bristow and Representative
Madison of Kansas.
Colonel Roosevelt complimented the
people of Kansas upon the oxtenslve
improvements that had been made to
their waterworks system. He ex-
pressed his Interest In. the Improve-
meut of the waterways, especially of
the Missouri river.
His address was In part as fol-
lows:
"There are certain matters which
should never be treated as party
matters; and foremost among these
Is the groat and vital virtue of hon-
esty. Honesty should be treated as
a prime necessity to our suC ess as
a nation. The minute that a ques-
tion of honesty as against dishones-
ty Is Involved, then we must all act
together as Americans, without the
slightest regard to party affiliations.
Honesty Is not a party matter; and
the first man to attack a scoundrel
of auy party should be the honest
men of that party. When In office,
I always proceeded upon the theory
that there would be no need of my
Opponents raising the cry of 'turn
the rascals out," because I would
turn them out myself Just as soon as
toy vigilant and intelligeat industry
I could discover them.
"The present Senator Bristow, for
install .e, waB In the postolllce de-
partment whon _ Information. reached
me which convinced me that there
was extensive rascality being prac-
ticed In the department. This infor-
■ [nation came to me through the then
first assistant postmaster general, Mr
Wynne—an admirable man, whose
honesty I knew to be beyond proof
The active work of the investigation
was doue by another postolllce offi
cial, in whose honesty, courage and
energy I had absolute confidence
the present Senator Bristow. When
he got through 1 knew that all the
rascals whose rascality could be de-
tected were-out of-plflce and that , all
of them had committed acts which
we could proceed against as crimi-
nal were lndlitwd or lmprisond. As
we dealt with the crooked public of
flclal, so wo dealt with the crooked
private cltixeo; with the rich swln
dler in New York or Chicago
with the horso thief or homicide in
Indian Territory. We never attack
ed a man because he was a man ol
one political ft*b or another be
cause he did not possess wealth; and
we dever shieM him because he
VMtM poor or rich, because he be-
longed to any particular church or
to any particular party. But I also
wish you eipwclally to remember that
We never hesitated to shield him and
stand up for him onoe we were con-
vincod that he was Improperly at
tacked.
"Tbore Is no greater foe of hon
esty than the man. who for any rea
son, in any capacity, attacks, or
qeeks to attack, an honest man for
crime which he has not committed
falsely accusing an honest man of
j dishonesty Is an act which stands on
the same level of Infamy with that
pf the dishonest man himself; and It
Is no higher duty to attack the dis-
honest man than ft is to exonerate
The Fall Season is upon us
and new goods are coming
in daily—Our Summer stock
which now consists of ODDS
and ENDS of all new and
up-to-date materials is being
sold at an ENORMOUS
SACRIFICE. Be here Sat-
urday. Store will be clos-
ed Monday, (Labor Day).
MADDEN & JARRELL
. "Heart of SDa-araa-m-ee"
PIPE NOW FOR GAS
EASY PAYMENTS
BE PREPARED FOR THE FIRST COLD SNAP.
ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED.
PHONE AND A SOLICITOR WILL CALL
SHAWNEE GAS
Phone 146
& ELECT. CO.
130 N. Broadway
the honest man falsely accused; and -J. + + + + 4* 4- +
+
q. W ANT WALSH FREE. •}•
•i" 4*
National News Association. +
+ Chicago, 111., Sept. 2.—Pe-
+ titlons signed by thousands 4*
+ of prominent Chicagoans, in- •}•
•j. eluding all the directors of
4* the defunct Walsh banks, will
be presented to President 4*
•j. Taft within the next few days -J"
+ In the hope of securing Mr. 4*
•J. Walsh's release from the I-ea- 4*
+ venworth penitentiary. +
+
should be ashamed to hesitate the
fratclon of a second longer In one
case than In the other.
Remember that honesty can not
be unilateral. Good cltliens should
cordially distrust the man who can
never see dishonesty excepting In
men of the class he dislikes. The
-eckless agitator who Invariably sin-
gles out men of wealth as furnishing
the only examples of dishonesty;
and the equally unscrupulous—but no
more unscrupulous—reactionary who
can see dishonesty only in a black
mailing politician or a crooked la-
bor leader; both stand on the same
.plane of obnoxlousness. You will
never get honesty from politicians
until you exact honesty from busi-
ness men. On the other hand, you
brand yourselves as fools or as hy-
pocrites if you say that the corpora-
tion owner, or the employer. Is al-
ways the dishonest man and the poor
man never, that tt la only the wealthy
man who corrupts the politician and
never the politician who corrupts the
corporation."
THIRTT INJURED.
WANTED—A reliable
at 307 N. Bell st.
cook at one,
l-3t
WANTED—Roomers and boarders.
Good table board; best of service;
price reasonable. 307 North Bell
street. i-gt
WANTED — General bouse work;
must have work by Wednesday; tel-
ephone 479 Black. 30-3t
WANTED—A dining room girl. 222
N. Bell. 30-31
YOUNG lady wants work with small
family. Call or leave word with C.
N., 1006 e. Main. 30-3t
WANTED—Girl for general house
work. 126 South Philadelphia. 29-3t
WANTED—A position as Janitor,
or light work. Address John Duffy,
care Clark's Seed Store, Shawnee,
Ok. 24-tf
FOR RENT
A. A M. COLLEGE.
Our boys and girls often seem to
lack Incentive and ambition in secur-
ing an education; but this is not al-
ways the fault ol the Individual boy
or girl. In many instances the "go-
ing away to colleges" awakens and
Inspires young people to make some-
thing of themselves—to learn to do
things worth while. Those boys and
girls who desire to complete their
educations are certainly cherishing a
most laudable ambition. Our State
Agricultural and Mechanical College,
located at Stillwater, Is proving one
of the most eBective Institutions of
learning in the We9t or South, and is
educating and training hundreds of
young people to nobler lives of use-
fulness.
The graduates of the A. & M. Col-
lege can always secure good poBl1-
tions because the education received
there Is liberal, scientific and practi-
cal. Our readers will do well to
write President J. H. Connell at Still-
water for a copy of the Illustrated
catalog, containing two hundred pages
of matter descriptive of this great
Oklahoma institution of learning.
18-St
KILLthe couch
and cure THE lungs
iilgs
New Discovery
PRICE
a u.oo.
Trla. flottle "ree
[ AND All 7NF0A1 M0 tiING TROUBLES.
fOHC^E?6
[oaARi! NX BED 8.1TI8 VACTOBT
1 OR HON F Y " ' ".'TVED.
HEALING BY DIVINE POWER.
By Doctor John E. Fleming. To-
bacco and alcohol habits a specialty.
At 135 South Edon street, Shawnee,
Ok. Office hours, 9 to 12 m; 2 to 5
FOR RENT—Modern two story
house; close in; cistern; cellar; wash
house. Phone 328. 31-6t
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for
housekeeping; down stairo; also a
lodging room. Phone 834 black. 201
North Broadway. 27-3t
FOR RENT — Two nicely fur-
nished rooms for light housekeeping.
150 feet south of street car line, or
the third house on South Cleveland.
Inquire of Mrs. M. P. Dickenson, who
lives there. 20-3t
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for
light housekeeping. 16 East Ninth
street. Phone 427. 18-3J.
p. m.
3-lm
HOW GOOD NEWS SPREADS.
I am 70 years old and travel most
of the time," writes B. F. Tolson of
Elizabethtown, Ky. "Everywhere I
go I recommend Electric Bitters, be-
cause I owe my excollent health and
vitality to them. They effect a cure
every time." They never fail to tone
the stomach, regulate the kidneys and
bowels, stimulate the liver, invigor-
ate the nerves and purify the blood.
They work wonders for weak, run
down men and women, restoring
strength, vigor and health that is a
daily Joy. Try them. Only 50 cents.
Satisfaction positively guaranteed by
all druggists.
IF YOU HAVE A SHADOW
of doubt as to the advantage of buy-
ing your lumber here ask the man
wbo works It up for you. Also watch
him work and hear him sing or whis-
tle. Everything goes so right it goeB
quickly. That means a shorter Job
and less expense for you.
The Taylor Lu-jer Co.
Nlun and Oklahoma 'Phone 111
NINE ROOM furnlBhed house to
rent for one year. 218 N. Union.
19-3t
FOR RENT—Nice cool ground floor
housekeeping rooms; south exposure.
501 N. Bell; phone 658 Black. 26-3t
TO LET—Pasture, with plenty of
water and good grass. Call at 214
North Beard. Phone 208. 23-61
FOR RENT—Three acreB of rich
land, two houses; close In. Fine for
fall crop of turnips. Apply at our
Photo Studio, 117 N. Union avenue.
Campbell & Edwards. 22-8t
FOR RENT—Good modern 7 room
house; close In. Inquire Louis Cohen
209 E. Main. 22-6t
FOR RENT—Two furnished house-
keeping rooms, all modern conven
loneea. 320 N .Broadway. 17-tf
A BARGAIN.
A $750.00 lot on N. Pennsylvania,
good location, east front; wanting to
leave city; will Bell for $400 cash, If
sold at once. Address E. H. c The
Nev s. 14-tf
Con keys Famous Poultry Remedies
ask for o'lr poultry book—FREB,
iDsolutelv ntsranteod
CLARK'S bfcfcl) STORE
_ Phons 140 208 E. Main.
You will always get returns If you
Insert a want ad In the News. Try
one In tomorrow's Issue.
•l, + + + + + ,i' + + 'l, + + +
FOR SALE
Money To Loan
I have eastern money for
elioice Farm or City Loans.
Rates Reasonable.
i. C. FISHER,
Real Estate & Loans,
106 Mammoth Bldg.
FOR sale:—Two mantle folding
beds, good as new; two second hand
tents; 1 drop head Singer sewing
machine; two rocking chairs; one
ed lounge In green plush and nu-
merous other things. 205 W. Main
street. 24-tf
A PIANO—At your own price. In-
quire at the Englslh Kitchen at once.
WM. MABEN T. 0. CUTLII
Maben & Cutlip
Attorneys at Law
Iffice rooms. Shawnee: Rooms No*
t, 1 and 4 Pottawatomie Bulldln.
Also offices at Tecumseh.
FOR SALE—Fine lsrge French bev
led Mirror 18x40 Inches, brand new
at half price. Wlrft Glass, fain am.
Paper Co. W-tf
KISCELLANEOUS
National News Association.
Boston, Mass., Sept 2. — Thirty
persons were injured, none fatally,
when a double header from New
York was derailed, and the mail,
baggage and smoking cars were
••vrecked.
WILL TRADE eighty acres 6 1-2
miles from town for land lu another
locality. W. L. Rose, R. F. D. No. 1.
-tf
MONEY 'lO LOAR on good real e>
tats secnrltT. Bee Kerker Bros 2ii'
FAREWELL PARTY.
Mr. Hnery Moyle, who is soon to
wed, entertained a number of his
friends—about 25—at a Dutch lunch
•{• in his rooms In the Whittaker build-
LOST—About ten days ago,a brace
let, name engraved Inside, Eila Par-
ker. Return to News office and re-
ceive reward. 80-3t
+ + + + + + + + + + +
COMMITTED SUICIDE
FOR BOARD and rooms, call at 110
S. Philadelphia. 2-3t
There will be a dance ta Chrisney
Hall, Saturday evening. 2-2t
National News Association.
Kansas City, Mo., Sept. I. — Mrs.
Emma Kali of Webb City committed
suicide In a private sanitarium here
today by hanging herself with
sheet rope, while the nurse was out
of her room.
ing, Thursday evening. A very
pleasant time was enjoyed by all the
guests.
Mr. Moyle will leave Shawnee to-
morrow for Abilene, Kas., where he
will be married, September 7, to Miss
Anna Pherson, formerly of McAles-
ter. After the wedding they will
take a trip through Colorado, and on
their way home will visit the soldier
boys at Fort Relly, Kas. They will
reside In a handsome home at Elev
enth and Klckapoo.
Howe Davla and faimly. who moved
here from LaFayette, Ind., and for-
merly of Urbana, 111., are in their
new home on N. Broadway, and will
be at home to their friends after
September ^6.
WANTED—Good young mare, well
broke; must be at right price. 220
E. Main. 2-tf
There will be a dance at Chrisney
Hall. Saturday evening. 2-2t
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND—Bill book, cont&lnlg min-
ing stock and pawn ticket for watch
Inquire at this office. 29-3t
STRAYED or stolen —One large
roan horse; one large bsy
mare. Return to No >10 North
Philadelphia. Phone 168. or Shaw
nee Advertising Co.
Vhawnei Loflfi imu. io. t. O. O. P.
Mee'3 every Thursday iilgnL
Visiting Brethren welcome.
'JK. ti. H. TAYMAN
...DENTIST...
PHONB 92
Office over Shawnee National *ank
SHAWMEE TRANSFER
ST O RAGE
Do a general trans-
fer & storage business
A. McDONALD, Prop
Sice Phuut 1X4 iNignt Phone 1191
(Jttloe 206 South Union
OR. W. J. CRAMPTON
Dentist
126 <4 North Broadway
Phone 769 Blacn
Oood Wera, Reasonable Priee«
CASTLE HALL SHAWNEE LODQf
No. 20. KNIOHTS OF PYTHIAS
Every Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock
tflslt'nsr brothers cordially Invited t<
ie present
Third floor, Poitofflce Building
F. W. Haifley K. of R. and S
W. Madden, C. C.
Electric
Bitters
Succeed when everything else faili.
In nervous prostration and female
weaknesses they are the supreme
remedy, as thousand*! have testified.
FOR KIDNCY, LIVER AND
STOMACH TROUBLE
<t is tho test medicine evei told
over a drugeibts counter.
E. F. PAXMJN & CO.
INSURANCE. LOANS, REAL ESTATE
Watch the want Columns for Our Specials
Phone No. 3b 119 N. Broadway
(the odeon
HIGH-CLASS
Moving PICTURES
WE SHOW THE BEST PRODUCED
OUR MOUSE
Is COOLEST in the city-AND CLEAN
LOST—Small bill book, well worn
containing 110 and 110 bills; twe
Santa Fe checks, one for 189.10 and
other, $11.60; a'so bank duplicates
for $14t.81; two for 1170. Reward
of 110 for return to this office or ti
C. L. Davis, Box 151, Pauls Valley
Ok. 16-3'
Have you a horse to sell or s se
Ing machine to tradsT Wbj not u*
the want columns of The Newst
A ft^Ji£P^°^DUCEfromXtcfii/rches
' MM DEALERS $3— UPWARD
UNCART EN BROS, Makers. Broadwav5'J4 St NY
/
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The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 109, Ed. 1 Friday, September 2, 1910, newspaper, September 2, 1910; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc90091/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.