Mountain View Times (Mountain View, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, February 20, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Mountain View Times and Tribune Progress and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE MOUNTAIN VIEW
IKES
JEFFERSON COTTON LEADS
C'tJ n
Larger
1»'»
Thar.
F ft/ Pe'
r iru
Gca*.
OkUimt f
C/U oj
y —PnlteJBvr report ,
A*d IS Ot lor "it .
I t&j 3>3>, pim oot
it**- of the trsnu, diovt a
»•^-,; aena>« for (lie l>i J ero> crrer
i **er lY.'t trop. The r?«(«( atrewr
for oi»«- evjn'.y vat et«wo to (be re
port os ItferMS twislf, which M
Mc<. n.’b 7 _i. i tout* tor i>18 a&4
MUt for 1*1*.
Thirty-seven w;r<w itow a decid-
td tboeue lor Uk 2*lt crop Tbt
report if on guu'tJM to rsuia*
bales. eousttojf icmu&i aa ball (***<
Listers are sot todoM. The report |
b; oouUti for JV19 to at loilcnrt
A/5*Jr. f/,; AUifca. to IK lietfcbatn.
'y. w. c. a. scholarships
A s' OpK-r- -' t «X oper. 'or
For mar m torn
FrBrr Sm/e vie Ur* feot
tVealr ted appSkat*.y»a for ttoUtr-
th.pa 3. too« ws-'ie ofwnd hjr the T.
If C A. EASvcfejO.eial .--m »w lor dt-
bks tu; 4o to tpt'.rw® tor
i a&i Mart* ». 1*3*.
• TLere are » i-str:^- toads to
! taro lor wnerai tatotou cars a
3rv*>Aii/ every oKttf of tbs ctale.
kt a' (be n t af+RcstiMW are betog
| tied tb*-/ vU K/x ail ba • e bees Crs-
| trlfcr:te«f
Tlett tn t*o (aaif; fl) aGtieraJ
I tfboanbip (sad v.ti which to par-
itue ('OiStrttaL private or corres-
<*4*c« toertet ax*4 (?) a ColSerjti*
usd. a .'a which to pax ta.Uoa xa
eofleteea
There are twesty trricaUsral, (!i
'otBi^rrtuJ. sixteen applied nsatbe-
1 marital u»d '»«*7 etirToeertox. Home
1 Ktmdf Corresponds* Coom* for
I tlote who cannot avail tbemjdrti of .
recPlexiOe attool it r.
Those fcstereeled to tbto line of
! tntoai should apply to tbe nearest
; A awe cation mentioned ielo*
PEACE N0TE3
F:*rr i^rjtrrrdi vert UM Y’
tufc; v vitfii. a mr»1 fcTVmjg
rd to rm the IV it:* Comtiy jxi.
u LexxLF-s® 1* Irori *T2S Lrf*:ifcl
l aecrw xhx ru icier rax vetoed a!
f .e iLSJder af Gearev*. HxrctOLkX. i i
years cod a 5-aistt Either* stofi'ipl
♦ ♦ ♦
Tbe O'd DcuzmKtt twr Praicess
Asne. tixi rriatsi at a r««I jf?
PfttOVlD OTOW OtmUTMlUL
Ip5 J|
-fe
-1--*=?-
Lesson
iw Fhbs r«e»lr, ru rrjrr!
Tbe treaty awarding Spitabwees to 1;
Norway v aa farted is tbe clock room e: to Lt^r br;i-: r m ive later F
sf tbe Freati ode* tbe other edit of tie erst tis hae rsattael
a.'lerbots. H=-?t Waiiae* tbe Aaer- ec board v?re said to baf-e Peer
lean iaaa-st.x, t-gied for tbe rescued toy a ftsr-r?ig boat
l a. ted States. + + *
4 4 + prey ptsietr1?! vert -Xjured nrsce
Tbe Gtfsaa cmnarat aeeord- fatally, ft v<j sad. vbr® toe coaeb
itg 'o tit Ze.tuxg AJET2titling. has noti- M cd Sea board Air L^t trajx No i.
tied Belgium that tbe German- Beig- New Tor* to Jk-isaerUe, rolled
fas fisaoeaai agreement, must be aa- dova ax oehukxMBt s:xKt«t it. s-s
x..it:. boca-te of Belgiuc * participar socta of =a-axxab. Ga Tie ca'-f* of
EEliEFIT CF LOCAL COUNCILS
iBy REV. R o R1TESVATEK. D D,
i» e: of Er^i blbl* In It* Uoody
Btl« l7.i;itu’* of Chicago)
ins. Wtneri A>nptp*t Caivni
LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 22
PETERS
DELIVERANCE
PRISON.
FROM
Goa im tbe extraditicMK dezaasd.
♦ ♦ ♦
Tbe list of pemeeu ebarstd vitb
war trivet vboxa A .Mr.i must dt-
lirw over to the Allien w:Jl be r.asded
to the Aittmn goreraneal at as
early date. aocc/r<iJL* to a Vi tuna di*-
pateb. It is ready, but vill be ex-
tbe wreck arsr oot .earned.
•f ♦ ♦
R G Sc?7*ier of tbe sales d-tart-
ment of tbe Federal Scgar Ref-nery.
*1 Wall street, said recently that
within two weeks there vul be plen-
ty of Ccbas ftxar at lover pnoes.
I;
it Oh:
Vt VA < »4P.
< carokoc. 4 PC. Oe»o- I Q
. V O • i-'b- 12.- "tato
SM. 'anla X- (A 1; I
T. M C. A. Bar.JeorfJJe
Y If C. A Haileyrille,
Y. M C. A Vuakojree.
Y M C A Oklahoma City
Y. M C A. Fapolpa,
Y. M C. A TnJaa,
Y. If. C A. Oklahoma CHy.
436 Patterson B.dg.
•f ♦ ♦
ammed by tbe reprenentatixes at The decennial ceaxsa. now being
Parts of Jugo-Siav.a. Poland, fc- marv- taken, will rereal that the center of
la ani CxechoFloraa.a popjlaticn of tbe United States has
♦ ♦ ♦ moved eastvard and cot toward the
The Social: sis accovxce that a vest or the south as commonly
Or* W Marti-s W- :*• Vrta 'y A'
■fecr Wt '*»* o' cve»-y Webber
of t*ve Co»v»”<unity.
Are yen a ksxsoa* ctnea or are
pot a oeu^i.-b«4T rinren?
Are you aui yonrs gertieg a square
deal to yonr diBtrictf
Are tbe pareroextsi. the street cars,
the gxrers c.ean mo giv.ng g.»od
service?
Are tbe prices yon j«sy for roe*h
potatoes, milk a&d bread, to year opla
km. ft:r at>d right?
Is tbe school furnishing yonr child
a goc»: e-tneacoo to return for yonr
taxes?
Is " t - • . >rd prorreer:!:? on ronr I. Peter’s Imprisonment (vr. 1-4).
re®’- 1. By whom (r. 1). Herod, the
These, according to the councils, are grandson of the wicked Herod who
* ‘e"r of the important rxarters of slew the Innocent children at BethSe-
ereryday city liTtog which should bem.
LE?SV)V TEXT-Ac-j 12:1-1*
GOLDEN TEXT—The i/.gtl of the Gor*
er-tariipetc rc .nd about tnem thae f«^>.r
hitn. and delivereth them.—Ps. 84:7.
APWTIOXAL MATERIAL—IJ King*
I it: Luke B7M£, AcU lt:3. 2*. Heb.
1.34 Jan.es i IS-31
PRIMARY TOPIC — How an Angei
Helped Peter.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Peter Delivered From
Prison.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC
—How Prayer Helps.
TOUXG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
—Things Wrought by Prayer.
14.724
f ‘arver.
U'.: 32
out. Cl
fpa/ty 3X424. Greer. 34A8: Hanrwfc,
)».b<A iL.*. 12 220.: Hugf^e*. to-115. j -
.; THLOCCO CASE IS UP AGAIN
lAHcan, 7*23 I»v«. U.X» M/y.Tair.. I -
: 4V if-. •■.*.' 23 O M •»• 32.- Another “He H* to 01! Lease Appears
ir/i Itipi it 1 . Murray, 31.721, K.e ,
4e t— ■' ------
genera: strike vill be proclaimed Reved. j a Hill, statistician of the tkv* * B,irf»dniy answer if a man 2. The reason (t. 3). It was to gain
thrv, vghont Poland if the government census bureau predicts. is t0 ns^:n * satisned citizen in hia the favor of the Jews. Herod was not
rejects the Bolshevik peace offer. 4- 4- 4- community. To get a satisfactory a Jew, and therefore knew that his
They assert that all the labor parties
W'niiam Edger and Joseph Hiliers *";tnrer be musz ** a member of his
would support such a strike. were killed at Chicago, recently when *** romfiL “In tr,es« times." says
♦ ♦♦ a af.vgallon varnish tank to the Morris JV5lrcuUr me organization.
Peace negotiations between Great Tauber Furniture factory exploded J' /’ er-*Ir ?Dunity council is a ray of
success was dependent upon having
the good will of the Jews. He did not
particularly hate the Church, but loved
popularity. Herod, for the sake of
tope. It is a nunpolitical, nonsectarf- popularity, assumed a deep sympathy
k■-*»- 3X717, .-«« x: AX Ova-
t'/rruL. JO.lit. Oirjr J.g-O. 10 4*1 , Oa&ge, .
) MX FvvMk 2.J24 P*77>» S4to; Il’t*-
k g lV.Kk! PtA.toto- 24,243 Poi«a-
W»!/A.-,J«. 2i 3V2. SemJ/ArV. 37 44>-; »-
li -7|*i 21,3Si 21,'Wi T5II-
ln Court.
Muakogee—Asking permission to
file suit against Receiver J. F Darby
Britain and soviet Russia are now to from spontaneous combustion.
progress according to a statement + + + tn ®c4gkborbood organization of the for degenerate Judaism. Since the
which the 3vec-ka Dagbladet attri- Enlisted of the armr continue p0?'* Toice of the neighbor- Church had developed into a success-
* - 1 hood."
hutes to Adolph Joffe before his de- to show great interest in the eduea-
opportunities offered them.
ful rival of Judaism—indeed was al-
ex.271. i toil]Km dollar oQ allotment, haley.
i toil! km dollar
7 r.c total amount for all the state Kernjnole Indian, claims to be a daugb-
In VtVt Is mzn. while 'he total for
the crop of 1*1* was HJtZZ, giving an
increase ot i'tlZ'SL baje* for the year
im.
MOONSHINE STILL RAIDED
Men jr.d Much Booze Found
Ehack Near Coweta
Muskogee,—Two complete moon-
shine stills, twentyflve gallons of
whisky, 2h0 gallons of mash and £00
pounds of sugar were seized by Dep-
uty Sheriffs Rutherford, O'Brien and
Murphy of Wagoner county, and four ^arfr'i
deputy government revenue men. The
officers found tbe outfit in an old
abandoned house In the center of a
field four miles west of Coweta. They
arrested two men who ga>j> their
Barnes as Griffith and Conners.
The officers said it was the most
elaborate outfit ever found In Oklaho-
ma, and the man had probably been
making whisky for six months. The
capture of the two stills at Coweta
probably will shut off one of tbe
sources of the contraband liquor now
being sold here. Local enforcement
officers have been tracing whisky to a
point near Coweta for four months,
but until this week could not ascer-
tain, they say, who lbe shippers were.
ter of the Creek Indian whose death
In 1'V* precipitated a Jong l«-gal tan-
gle over the disposition of his prop-
erty. ThJoceo Is beLeved to have no
surviving direct descendants, as he
anl his family died in a stockade dur-
ing the epidemic of measles to Indian
Territory.
Saley does not mention the name of
her mother, who may hare been one
of Thlocco’s wives. She asks an ac-
counttog and quieting of the title to
the allotment, value of which is said
to have run over JC.OOO.CKK) In recent
years. s
Saber and Martha Jackson were de-
to be the most direct heirs
from Thlocco to a decision banded
down by Federal Judge Youmans. Hun-
dreds of claimants to an heirship have
been bought off by the Black Panther
Oil and Gas Company. Mr. Darby has
been receiver to the case since It went
Into the courts on the motion of the
government to have the property re-
vert to the Creek* because of the fact
that Thlocco died before the allot-
ments were actually made. This mo-
tion was defeated.
parture from Dorpat, where he bead-1 tional opportunities offered them. __ Parenthetically, it may be added ready displacing it—he saw an oppor-
ed the BoUherik peace delegation, nearly 30 per cent of the enlisted per- th£I 1 £r?e P®n ot vo*<^ ls fen»* tunity to curry favor with the Jew* by
4-4-4 sonnel having been enrolled, according ;thousands of nousewives being putting his hand forth against it
The allied reply to the Dutch note i« a recent war department statement, ^ various locals.—Ex- 3. Tbe method (v. 4). Peter was ar*
refus ng extradition of the ex-kaiser 4 4 4
will be a distinct reapplication of the SOUTHWEST.
original allied demand that he be de- . — . _
__.... Military authorities at Fort Bliss
livered to them for Inal, it was said , .. „ .. __ .
are investigating the disappearance of
on good authority in London.
♦ * ♦
The action of Baron Kurt ven Lers-
to his government, has placed the
Allies in somewhat of a dilemma is
the belief of the moderate liberal piles 111 camps.^
press in London. No event Binee the
armistice has created such a sensa-
tion.
was the custom for two soldiers to be
in the prison, one on each side of the
Use only safety matches and make bound t0 arms with
PROTEST JUNKING OF R. R.
rested, put into prison and guarded by
four quaternions of soldiers. A qua-
TO PREVENT LOSS BY FIRE terni0D is a guard of four soldiers on
_ duty at the same time. Four quater^
KmZZTJ »•*-. •< P~p.Hr ‘■£“ '‘"’X.'ft
Will Lead to an Enormous on dmy watch of the nighL U
ner "to"refusing ~to transmit the”list revealed by an invoice. | A""«* ^"3-
of German, demanded by the Allies ^ t,G*nfal commander
t of ?UP lt forchi.dren7og7t to“e^ ^haiD8 <*■ 6>‘ The third one to watch
f Always place burned matches In metal ! 0ut8ide the door and the foarTh t0 b®
receptacles; never throw them on the near the ou,side gate’ HuuianlJr
I speaking It was impossible to escape.
However, they made one fatal mis-
take ; they left out God.
II. The Church of God in Prayer
(v. 5).
The Church was In a crisis; her sit-
uation was most grave. James, one of
the pillars of the Church, was dead,
and Peter, the most prominent of all,
was in prison. In this desperate strait
Have the telephone number of the the-v did ,he wlsG thiDg: the-v betook
Col. J. S. Holden, 80 years old. phil- fl°£r or lntu° waJ5te baskets-
To smoke in garages, in bed
osopher, historian and writer, is dead * ' lu garages- in DGa or
at Lis home at Fort Gibson. Colonel "0UDd stabIes containing hay is de-
«p«--- -* jss‘s*‘tL£L“5sr Tirz, f'“«rnpp^m,c
mentetof^ato“ cirresptL^tTf territory for a quarter of a ^ Tme.^ey" be^rolm^
tbe Associated Press that the mini- urj* + 1 against freezing.
Deliberate intent to wreck a Texas /' we<l ?f’ lbat tbe garden hose
Pacific passenger train by throwing . ^ , tbe kitchen faucet,
a switch is charged by Newton Smith
Biers were unanimous in declaring
that surrender of the men demanded
by the Allies on the unofficial or any
other extradition list was an utter
physical impossibility.
4-4-4
WASHINGTON.
In the face of an Indorsement of
the principle by President Wilson and
his appeal to take no party action
STATE H0U$E HW5
of Fort Worth, engineer of the train ne,ireSt ife station on a special card
which was wrecked recently near 8t J°ur tG'ePbone._
Ranger, Tex. One man was killed ami ia ze t e family with the op-
and ten injured. ; of tbe nearest fire alarm box.
+ + + After operating a fire alarm stay near
An electrical massage machine in 11 t0 dirtct tbe fir*'mcn to the fire. Ev-
the bath tub to which the body of ery m,riute is important,
against it, tbe Democrats of the house Mamie Schribre was found recently _ "r‘ 1 a t0 notif> the chief of the
of representatives in caucus, recorded at Oklahoma City, is believed by the fire ^P^ent of anything you may made by the Church. God hears the-
theraselves overwhelmingly to opposi- ’ police to have carried the current "* ,n the neighborhood that is dan- prayers of Individuals, but there is
tion to universal military training which caused the girl's death,
legislation by this congress.
Mrs.
themselves to prayer. There is not-
ing too hard for God. Theirs was a
noteworthy prayer:
1. It was unto God. not unto men to
be heard of men. This is a very com-
mon fault today. All true prayer is
unto God.
2. It was united prayer. It was
00 0 0 0 0 p
:
Reno Association to Fight Plan of
Owners.
El Reno- Protesting the proposed
sale of the 8L I/mls, El Reno and
Western railway for the purpose of
junking it, at a meeting attended by
the executive board of tbe El Reno
chamber of commerce, and business
men and property owners from the
various towns along the railroad be-
tween Kl Reno and Guthrie, an asso-
ciation was formed to use all possible
legal means to prevent any firm,
or corporation from taking up the
rails of the road. -
Due to the fact that the road has
been a losing proposition for some
time, stockholders advertised It tor
sale recently, but this sale was re-
called until later in the year. While
only one train a day is run over the
rails, citizens along the road state
that they have invested their money
in good faith, based upon the opera-
tion of the road, which would cause a
great loss should the service be dis-
continued. Tbe association will also
investigate methods of making the
road a more remunerative proposi-
tion.
In Regular Movie Style.
HoIUh.—Passengers on a \V. F. A H.
passenger train were thrown into a
panic when the train was slopped two
mlleH east of Hollis while, the sheriff
engaged In a running revolver light
with Robert Bateman, 20 years old,
and Zighley I-Acy, 1C years old, who
robbed a hardware Btore at Gould,
and were walking along a road near
the railway tracks. Several of the
bullets struck tbt passenger coaches,
more than twenty shots being fired,
but no one was injured, and the ;w.
boys captured in a ravine.
Cherokee Suit For Negro Land.
TulBa—A telegram from Washing-
ton to Tate Brady, general chairman
of the Cherokee claims organizations,
says that the house Indian committee
voted unanimously to allow the Chero-
kee* to bring suit against the govern-
ment t orecover on lands and moneys
given to negro freedmen since 186(5.
The suit will be filed this spring.
Plans for it were made at a conven-
tion of Cherokees held here in 1916.
.Estimates are that the moneys to be
iasked by the Cherokees will total
,#30.000,000.
A. E. Nichols of Halleyville, was ap-
pointed mine inspector for district No.
2 by Governor Robertson. He cuc-
ceeds W. T. Williams whose resigna-
tion was received.
Valuation of banks tot taxation will
be made not on the face value of their
shares, surplus and undivided prifltB
but la accordance with their total as-
sets, considering stock as valued at
the amounts for which the shares are
being bought and sold, the atotmey
general's department advised Fred
Parkinson, state examiner and Inspec-
tor. Reai estate owned by banks is
to be deducted from the estimated
value of their shares and assessed and
taxed to the banks as if owned by
individuals, the opinion bolds.
Earl Lewis, 18 years old, of Sapul-
pa, was given a parole by Governor
Robertson. He was convicted of bur-
glary last March and sentenced to two
years in the penitentiary.
Paroles have Deen granted to Savan
nah Green of Vinita, serving a five-
year term in the penitentiary since
June, 1918, for buying and receiving
stolen property and to Fred Botkin
of Enid, charged with embezzlement,
whose conviction in the district court
of Garfield county was affirmed re-
cently by the criminal court of ap-
peals. Botkin nqver served any of his
sentence of one year In the peniten-
tiary.
Unclaimed federal aid money for
road construction in counties of Okla-
homa in 1920 amounts to 13,115.000,
Robert C. Terrell, state highway en-
gineer, announced. Of that sum, $2,-
000,000 will not be available until
July 1. In order to get the money,
counties must appropriate funds for
roads to the amount they wish to get
from the federal fund. If the entire
sum Is used this year, it will mean
the starting of 16,230.000 worth of
roads.
Disappointment awaits county com-
missioners who resign in the hope of
being named their own successors in
order by that means to get the in-
creased salary provided by the last I
legislature, Governor Robertson Jn j
formed an Inquiring commission jr.
The commissioner asked the governor
if he might not evade the provision
of the law making the increase inop^
erative for commissioners then in cf
flee by resigning and being re-appoint-
ed. Resignations will be accepted in
good faith, the governor declared.
gerous or liable to cause fire.—Ex-
+ 44 ;chan^-
Bessie Baker, 17 years old,
was releasesd from the attic of her
I home in Okemah, Okla., by county
cases, are contemplated now by the j officers, where she said she had been of what the own-your-own-home cam'
the President’s industrial conference held prisoner for eight months by her paign means to the nation has been re-
4 4 4
Industrial courts, operating extra-
1<.gaily and handling only voluntary
Plea for Home Ownership.
From Portland, Ore., a western view
as the substitute for the rejected plan
for arbitrary settlement of industrial
disputes.
4 4 4
President Wilson will accept the
Hitchcock reservations to the peace
treaty, he said in a letter read recent-
ly to thirty Democratic senators in
conference cm tije treaty. The reser-
vations mentioned were rejected by
the Senate on November 19.
4 4 4
husband, who, she ciaim3, had enter- eeived by the United Statea depart-
ed into a conspiracy with others to ment of labor.
get control of valuable oil land in the William A. McRae of the Bank of
Beggs field which she owns. California writes:
+ 44 ! “Whether the home is a cottage or a
Tbe third special session of the palace it equally shelters and en-
1919 Arkansas general assembly has (brines the sacred love and devoted af-
fection of ail that is best and wor-
cent smash and unprecedented de-
moralization in foreign exchange.
4 4 4
President Wilson has accepted, ef-
fective March L the resignation of
ended. During the twelve days’ ses-
sion about 450 road, drainage, levee thiest in our common humanity. Why
and school measures were enacted. should every married man own his
+ + + | home?
Personal property found on prem- “First, to give his wife a chance to
A reduction In the cost of living ie ; toes where a whisky still is operated make a home, which is the natural de-
forecast by high government offimals may be confiscated and forfeited, ac-1 Hire of the normal woman, who in the
in Washington as a result of the re- cording to a ruling made by United cramped quarters of the boarding
States District Judge Faris at St. house or apartment lacks sufficient
Louis recently. breathing space. Secondly, to supply
+ + + fils family with an environment where
FOR^iGN. paternal love and devotion may have
Former Hungarian soldiers who ample room and the privacy so essen-
Franklyn K_ Lane, nearly seven years h®'6 returned to Hungary after escap- tlal to enable parents to train their
secretary of the Interior department. from Russian prisons in Siberia children by setting before them in
The necessity that after twenty-one state tbere are 200,000 Hungarian their plastic stage an example worth
years of public life he must “now prisoners of war in that country an 1 while.”
think of other duties” was the reason Gmt their condition to pitiable. Some -
assigned by Mr. I^ane for his with- them have been away from home
from three to six years.
drawal from the cabinet.
♦ 4 4
Reorganization of the railroad ad-
ministration for its work as a gov-
ernment liquidating agent in prepara-
Old, but Ever True.
It is in part to help the spiritual
Northern Ko*ea*as been evacuated ^owth and.10 tea,ch tba y°un& [dea'
by the Japanese, it to reported in a (,f immunity spirit how to shoot”
wireless dispatch from Moscow, quot- ,hat the cbamber °* ~erce pub-
lished in its monthly bulletin lines
like these:
ing an Omsk message. The popula-
tion for a return of the roads to their tion rose to aid Korean forces from
owners on March 1. has been by Di- Chinese territory, it is said. lf you **ke to live in the kind of a town
rector General Hines. The first steps ♦ + + -8t .. n .‘’grip
were creation of a division of liquida- Bolshevist uprisings against the And start on a long long hike
tion claims and the abolition of the -Japanese on the Island of Sakhalin you>n oniy flr.d what you left behind,
division of capital expenditures, ef- reported. Important Japanese For there’s nothing that’s really new.
fective February 15.
+ 44
DOMESTIC.
Plans for the fiist nation-wide ag-
mining and petroleum plants have R’s a knock at yourself when you knock
been attacked. A rescue party in
thirty sledges has been sent to the
1 scene.
4 4 4
Fire, which broke aboard the Amer-
gressive political campaign by organ- wooden. freighter Brookland at
lzed labor to control congress and Regia docks in Havana harbor
elect friendly national and state offi- ^ tfae principal buildings ol
cials have been made by a commit- American Agricultural and Chem
tee of the American Federation of La- lcaj company, destroying the build
bor and will be announced Boon.
4 4 4
Further loans from federal farm
togs and
their contents.
4 + +
your town.
It isn’t the town, it’s you.
Real towns aren’t made by men afraid
Lest somebody else gets ahead.
When everyone works and nobody shirks,
You can raise a town from the deud.
And if while you make your personal
stake
Your neighbors can make one, too.
Tour town will be wliat you want to see,
It isn’t the town. It’s you.
Many Small Homes Built,
The building projects of llllll figure
ti^^h^'onstitotiOTa^y^^^the*^farm re^ao^gT., n Nawini'a!"
, . , z , . ____ recently isHuea a com- The most Interestlnir fcntnnB
«t ha. I~. dt.ml.ed b, a. ^ T"' m0’'' ........* ~
r™ b,."„ w***' ***»*«. «•;
sent out by the farm loan board.
4 4 4
The Milwaukee Press Club has ex-
of the matter ls the rnct Unit nit tin
ercentnge of
the building of anuill
surgeois and tbe Serbians is inces-
sant.
4 4 4
what amounted to virtually a new
pelled Victor I* Berger. Socialist edl- notft hag bwn gent to Berljn bv th#
tor. who was ousted recently from A11|e8 to be p^ntod to the German
congress for the second time on government with the list of persons , .. ...
charge, of disloyalty and sedition. accuaed of war crimes besides tbe ^ Bl« hoW l” l,f«
Berger has been a member of the orjglna| covering letter drawn up to
press club thirty rears. laccomoanv the lisL
Ing was
homes.
Community's Big Four.
The church, the school, tin* county
agent, the local newspaper these are
peculiar power in the united prayer
of God's people.
3. It was an intensely earnest
prayer. It was more than unceasing:
prayer; It was the yearning desire of
the soul as it stretched itself out to-
ward God.
4. It was definite prayer. They spe-
cifically interceded for Peter. Their
prayer was concentrated, definite and
specific.
III. Peter Delivered by an Angel
(w. 6-11).
This occurred the night before Her-
od’s plan to make a public display of
him.
1. Peter sleeping (v. 6). The angel
found Peter asleep. The Lord keep»
in perfect peace those whose minds
are stayed on him (Isa. 26:3). Again,
he gives his beloved sleep (Psalm
127:2).
2. Peter leaving the prison (vv. 7-10).
The heavenly light shone in the prison.
The angel smote Peter on the side,
the chains fell off, Peter put on his
clothes, passed by one guard after an-
other, through the iron gate out into
the city.
3. The effect upon Peter (v. 11). Al-
though the event was so wonderful to
Peter, and at first he thought It c
vision, when he came to himself he
was assured beyond peradvPnture of a
doubt that God had miraculously de-
livered him from Herod's wicked
hands.
IV. Unconscious Unbelief (vv. 12-19).
1. The behavior of F'eter and the
Church (vv. 12-17). Peter went to
the house of Mary and knocked. The
knock was answered by Rhoda, who
was so overjoyed on hearing Peter’s
voice that she forgot to open the gate
and ran in and told them that Peter
was at the gate.
2. The behavior of the soldiers (vv.
18, 19). There was great agitation
among them over Peter's disappear-
ance. This was a serious matter,
since they were responsible for him.
Not being able to account for Pater’s
escape, Herod commanded that they
he put to death.
•
He Not Too Sure.
lie not too preMumptuottsly sure in
any husini’HN; for tilings of this world
depend on stndi a train of unseen
■ lintn io that tf it were in man's hands
In p«e ilie tables, still lie would not bo
curtain to win the game.—Herbert.
Care of Today.
The cares of today are seldom those
of tomorrow; and when we lie down at
night we may safely say to most of
onr troubles. “Ye have done your
worst, and we shall see you no more.”
—Cowper.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Forgy, F. E. Mountain View Times (Mountain View, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, February 20, 1920, newspaper, February 20, 1920; Mountain View, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc914296/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.