The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 131, Ed. 1 Friday, September 30, 1910 Page: 3 of 8
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Tg NEWS, THREE MO NTH 8, >1.
THE SHAWNEE MEWS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER SO, 1#1
PAGE THREE
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A Salary
To Agents
Hampton'.*) Maoazine wants a representative m every town, to get
mbftcribers for the livest and fastest-growing magazine in America.
Irresistible Premium Offer. A paying proposition for full or spare
time. Big commissions; also a guaranteed Salary for a definite num-
ber of orders. The "Subscription Harvest Season *' is on—start
HOW. Write at once for " Salar\ Flan" and KRKE Outfit.
Address "Von," Sales Manager, Hampton's Magazine, h:; West
S5th St., New York City.
FREE to BOYS a d GIRLS!
A $40.00 Colurr.bia Bicycle
Absolutely FRKE I r a litt.le easy
spare time work for Haa: pton's M at;-
a/1N 1 Send a postal cartl and ask
for our wonderful 1' K K E Bicycle
offer. Addre> "The llitycle Club"
Room 5.3, (X W.Sfith St.,New York.
m-s. is-
OL
4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4- 4. 4. -J- 4. -H" + + + + +
4*
* BEWITCHING EYES OF MADAMK OAVAIJERI. *
+ +
4. 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* *%• 4* 4* 4* 4*4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4*
Johnny Evers, the crack second baseman of the Cubs and one of the
best known men on the diamond, who, according to report, is considering
an offer to quit the Chicago team and join the Bostons.
Malicious
i \ 1
Animal
Magnetism—
There are few men and women who
have not asked "What is malicious
animal magnetism? " There are few
who have not wondered whether
they possessed this strange influ-
ence, or whether they were not
victims of it in some form. Prof.
Joseph Jastrow, of the University
of Wisconsin, has studied M.A. M.
from the standpoint of a psycholo-
gist. His conclusions are highly
interesting, going back as they do
to the root of Christian Science,
and therefore to Mrs. Eddy. His
discussion of the entire subject is
one of the month's best magazine
features.
Yon will also enjoy Judson C. Welliver's " The Collapse
of the Taft Administration," and the articles and stones
by Eugene Wood, Gouvernenr Morris,FrSleric Palmer,
Edwin Balmer, William MacHarg, Hugh Johnson and
others in
HAMPTON'S
"The Best Magazine in America"
October 15 Cents On Sale Now
t
nr*I • 1 I . The Advertising pages
Ihis Is Important. of a magazine t0-day
are just as brim full of information and fust as full of red
blood as the editorial pages. We would like to have you
read the eight page advertisement of the Willis Overland
Automobile Co., beginning on page 23 of the October
" HAMPTON'S" and telling the story of a most wonder-
ful success made by one of the biggest automobile manufac-
turers in the world today.
newspaper 18 TOWN BUILDER.,
overflow with aavertlsements of bull-
* newspaper who.e e. urns o^erflow^ ^ ^ ^ # ^ ^
neu men ha more Influence fl0 wher<( there n
any other agency tha csn^ enterpr„lnB com-
business. Capital a - a towf) ,0 we)|
N° tzzSH■ « ««.
rrir:;-->->«- — w
town and \ownsmen.—Wannamaker.
J. W. McNeal was born In 1862, In
Marlon county, Ohio, where ne spent
the days of his early life, attending
the country schools, such as they
had In those days, and during vaca-
tion worked on the farm, until 19
years of age.
He, like most young men or those
times, had higher ambitions, and be-
Ing full of aspiration, found the old
surroundings uncongenial, with but
little chance for advancement, and
having heard of the great and grow-
ing west, concluded to come out and
try his fortunes on the western
plains.
In 1873 he landed in Barbour coun-
ty, Kansas, where he took to the
farm, and in this work he spent sev-
eral years—as a farm hai.d, cowboy,
and later as a country school teacher.
Feeling that there were wider fields
of usefulness open for him higher
up, he chose that of editing a news
paper, then the law. He practiced
law for five years, when he was
elected to the office of prosecuting
attorney of Barbour county, in which
position he exhibited marked ability,
winning the confidence and esteem
of the people who had entrusted
him with the highest and most re-
sponsible office In the county.
By exceptional frugality, economy
and Industry he was soon on the
road to greater things in the finan-
cial world, and in 1883 he establisn-
ed a bank at Medicine Lodge, Kan.,
which he continued to conduct until
1889. In the booming days of the
new territory he sold out in Kansas
and came to and set tied in Guthrie,
where he established the first bank
In the territory of Oklahoma. This
he gave his personal attention from
1889 nnUl 1910, when he retired from
active business, In January.
Mr. McNeal has been noted all of
his life as a suocessrui Dusiness man,
having risen from the plow handles,
a poor boy, to a place of prominence
in the new state, where he is recog-
nized as among her most substantial
financiers and safe business men.
His motto from bis youth to the
present Ume has been frugality, hon-
esty and fair dealing with his fel-
low men, believing whatever was
good for him was equally as good for
others.
He Is making the race for govern-
or on a platform of his own making,
"More business and less politics,"
and It is this that Is winning him
support from all oVer the state among
the honest farmers, regardless of
politics. He also has other and no
less convictions upon educational
lines that find earnest support among
the thinking masses.
It has been generally conceded that
a man who can rear himself and
start without capital other than char-
acter, honesty, frugality and strict
THE MAN
THAT IS GOING TO BUY USUALLY
GOES TO T11E PLACE THAT All-
VERTISES THE BEST FOli THE
CHEAPEST.
THE TOWN
THAT IS ALIVE IS THE TOWS
WHERE THE MERCHANTS ARE
PROGRESSIVE AND USE SPACE IN
THE LOCAL PAPERS.
THE MERCHANT
THAT GETS THE BUSINESS IS THE
WAN THAT USES A CERTAIN
AMOUNT OF MONEY IN ADVERTIS-
ING HIS GOODS TO THE PUBLIC,
AS THEY READ AND LOOK FOR
HIS AD.
« *.« «, ♦♦♦+♦ ♦ ♦ .«.
► ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦,
♦ *♦
Three Bets of the wonderful eyes of Madame Cavalieri Chanler, who is
said to have bewitched "Bob" Chanler into turning over to her every
available cent he had In the world—all through her seductive optics. John
Armstrong Chanler, a brother of Cavalierl's husband says: "I have studied
her face and know every emotion she Is capable of, for they are all writ-
ten there in her chiseled features, and in her languid calcilating eye. The
woman has the face of a syren. She is the reincarnation of the Lorelei—
a -woman with the eyes of a mermaid—capable of creating passion in the
onlooker, but with no ability to feel the least of it herself."
4*4-4*4"4*4*4,4*4-4"4,4*4*
4. 4*
4. R. R. TIME TABLE. 4*
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4#4*4*4*4*4*4"4*4*4*4*4*4*
4. 4-
4. MAKES BIO AVERAGE. 4*
4. 4*
4- 4" •!" •!■ 4* *1* v v 4* *•"
self INTEREST.
Occasiuiioiiy tne mail order houses do put out .ome real bargain*.
They could not continue to do business if this were not the case,
but in the long run the con.tant patron, of the.e institution, are
loser.. If the practice of buying from such dealers became the gen-
eral rule, the smaller towns and cities, with the conveniences and ad-
vantages for which they stand, would be practically wiped off the
map. Self Interest demands that the consumers make their pur-
chases at their home town or the one nearest to them which doe.
the most for them in the way of conveniences and advantages.
liork Island.
Arrive
Eastbouna
42—1:40 a. m.
44—11:20 a. m.
48—7:16 p. m.
84—Local Freight
Westbound
41—4:00 a. m.
47—9:16 p. m.
43—5:00 p. m.
Asher Branch
665—arrives 9:00 a. m.
664—leaves 2:25 p. m.
Santa Fe
North
614—7:05 a. m.
80—1:00 p. m.
From North
Depart
1:to a.m.
11:10 a.m.
7:20 p. m.
a. tu.
4:27 a. m.
9:23 a.m.
5:18 p. m.
South
317—8:16 a. m.
301—3:00 p.m.
From South
302—12:20 m.
318—5:15 p. m
407—2:30 p. m.
application to business, will give to [413—6:00 p. m.
the state a safe, economical and sane | M. K. & X.
administration. 1 Going South
| Ar. 9:05 a. m. LeaveB 9:06
Going West
4,4*4,4*4,4"4*4*4*4,4*4*4,i
! 4- 4-
I* OCR BUSINESS MEN. *
4- There is a slight difference
•J. in the different ways of ad- 4*
•J. vertislng. Some merchants 4*
•J. have found that circulars 4*
I" bring results; others that pos- 4*
•J- tal cards sent to the homes 4"
4- bring them success, but the 4*
4* ulan that appreciates good
•J« newspaper space is the real 4*
advertiser. He never need 4"
4* worry about a dull season or 4*
•J. a crop failure, as he KNOWS 4*
4" that the people are going to
4. buy and that they will buy 4*
4- from HIM. Then there are 4"
•J. other men that are pessimists 4*
4. who complain that the scar- 4"
4« city in the money market has 4*
affected us here so locally that 4*
4. we are cn the verge of a 4"
4. panic. He bewails hlB busi- 4*
4* ness even during the good 4*
4> seasou, so his opinion does 4*
not matter very much at any 4*
4. time. It Is the live and pro- 4*
{. gressive man that continually 4*
4. keeps his name before the 4*
4- public, and It Is he that never 4*
4. has met with FAILURE and 4"
knows nothing but SUCCESS. 4-
4. 4. .J. 4. 4. 4. 4. + 4. -I- 4.
Ar. 6:58 p. m.
Leaves 6: £8 p. m.
OOOOOOO <0000000
0 0
0 SHAWNEE. 0
4. 4.
000000000000 0 00
Built In a forest—from a brush pile
to the metropolis of a great section
of the Southwest In thirteen years,
and never having had a boom in the
ordinary sense of the word, but
vigorous, healthy and continuous
growth, is a record only made pos-
sible by the natural resources of the
surrounding territory.
Its broad avenues are lined on each
side with rows of stately elms and
maples which, with tne beautiful rest
dences and well-kept lawns, have
transformed the ri ci Into a veritable
rectlon aa the great school of Notr,
Dame—which will earoll 1000 boy
student and have the support of
000 Catholics.
Built In a forest—rror t a brusn pile
to the metropolis of a great section
of the Southwest In thirteen years,
and never having had a boom In the
ordinary sense of the word, but a
vigorous, healthy and continuous
growth. Is a record only made possi-
ble by the natural rseources of the
surrounding territory.
F"oe factory sites with splendid
switching facilities are available.
Shawnee is the third city of the
State of Oklahoms, in population, In
commerce, and wealth, and the me-
tropolis of a large section of the
State.
Shawnee Is located In central Ok-
lahoma, on the north side of the
North Canadian River, and Is known
as the Central City of the State. It
ii-as also built in the midst of a dense
forest, and for that reason Is known
In the Southwest as the "Forest City."
Her. there was a natural site for a
city. With the passage of 13 years
since these broad fleldB were opened
to white settlers, the necessity of a
city whore Shawnee now stands has
grown with the development of the
outhwest.
4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4-
4. Don't fail to seoure a copy 4*
of this beautiful new ballad
published by Jerome H. Rem-
Ick A Co. Ita tender, dreamy
melody and sentimental ly-
rics will make friends for
"The Qadren of Roses" eve-
rywhere. In three keys;
Bplendld quartette arrange
ment goes with the song. For
sale wberever music Is sold.
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4. 4. 4. 4. 4- 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4- 4.4.4.4.4.4. 4. 4.4.4.4.4.4.
CUARAXTE ED/oREDU C\.from\tc6//?c/ies\
I &/// DEALERS UPWARD
WEINGARTEN BROS, AfaAers, BroadwavC'JJ4 St.NY
IMPORTANT!
Shortstop Knight of the New York
Americans, who has been doing moBt
excellent work for his team during
the last week or so. He has sent
his league average up several points
by hitting and running and fielding
In phenemonal manner. His average
at the end of the recent game be-
tween New York and SL Louis was
.311, or sixth on the list.
W. advertise to send our five ton
steel frame Pities. Scale on approval.
Misunderstanding In a leter from Al-
bert T. Gardiner, who only wanted
prl"e, we will soon have a scale at
Shawnee which will be told at a re-
duction to save storage or reshlp-
pjng. The first reasonable offer will
be taken. Address Jones of Blng-
hampton 300 X street. Blnghampton,
Absolutely
"Pure
Timothy Jordan, the veteran firBt
baseman of the Brooklyn team, who
has just been acquired by Owner
Crayson of the Louisville base ball
organization. In addition to active
playing with the LoulsvilleB, It Is
understood that Jordan will manage
that club next year.
A want ad will find you a suitable
boarding place and will also get suit-
able boarders.
Baking Powder.
Comes from Grapes
The only baking pow-
iiy
der made from Royal
Grape Cream of Tartar
Imitation baking poivders are made ^ro"J ^ari^
mineral acids and leave in the food
unhealthful properties
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The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 131, Ed. 1 Friday, September 30, 1910, newspaper, September 30, 1910; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc90113/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.