The Lincoln County Journal (Stroud, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, December 24, 1909 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Lincoln County Journal/Stroud Star and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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t
^.......^ -
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SERIAL
STORY
pigSUffK^I
r
\Tfie
Izard
qfOz
tf»p throno room ho said, pleasantly
"Sil down, my doar; 1 think 1 have
found the way to got you out of this
country." . , .
"And back to Kansas?" she asked,
eagerly.
“Well, I’m not sure about Kansas,
said Oz; "for 1 haven’t the faintest
notion which way It lies But the first
thing to do is to cross the desert, and
(hell it should be easy to find your
way home "
cross the desert
she
1 — mm^ -rr^ tamammammamm^ao
11 By ^ ] t.Trank Bam,
.........
III I u I
w. w.
SYNOPSIS.
lived In Kansas with Aunt Em
-ml Uncle Ilcnrt A -Vi.r^lllnaUIccp
liomo Into tti«‘ 'it*-. ' ^ , | uwakcnnl
midst th* »xrltemant. A craiin
Dorothy i
ncle
pKinldst th* exrltemoi
tuM’ The liouflf liA(l
of innrvtlnuB beauty,
'i,iiioonle creeteo n
lundeil in a country
Groups of <1
up* Of queer
'little people BJ-eeted hrT ili’a'kfiled "tludr
Munehkins. The house hart kiii
enemy, the wInkJet witch of l.asc g|lt)
fitliy took tin witch » silver fln(, ,|„.
itwrted for tho Knru'rald < \ty
WIrard of Os. who d “rPback to
light find a way to “nd
snsas Oornthy r.leaaedjir.oarof ^
vIhk Win llfr H
Irln
fe
k.......a i:?„r.nHd;a^.3;3aberrow
»oM r»ra«.
b„V.hh0emtoBW.y°Am. upon a terrthle
»'»“ , osny ti..m to
5? m -M"i» ^"^"U'Tare"
■ he Wlznrd of O* Jo hw*in»«* ln»
trow tn pushing Jh* n raft ^eM <>f tll.
"How can
Inquired . .,
"Well, I'll tell you what 1 think,
salt! the little man "You see. when
1 came to this country it was in a bal-
loon. You also came through the air,
being carried by a cyclone. So 1 he
lleve the best way to get across the
desert Will be through the air. Now.
It is quite beyond my powers to make
4 cvclono; but I've been thinking the
Latter over, and I believe 1 can make
i balloon."
"How?” Rwlwod Dorotlij
T "A balloon ” said Oz. “is made of
jiilk, which Ih coated with Rluo to keep
the gas in It, 1 have plenty of silk
In the palace, so it will he no trouble
for „s to make the balloon But in
tills country there is no gas to fill the
balloon with, lo make it float.”
■ If it won't float." remarked Dor-
othy, "it will he of no use to us.
"Trim," answered Or.. "Blit there is
another way to mako U-Hoat. which is
to fill It with hot air. Hoi air taut
„. good as gas, for if tho air should
get cold tho balloon would come down
In the desert, and we should he lost.
Wo!" exclaimed Ihe girl; "are you
going with me?”
"Yes. of course." replied Or. "I am
Hred of being such a humbug If
should go out of this palace my peo-
ple would soon discover 1 am uot a
Wlrard. nnd then they would be vexed
with me for having deceived them. So
where the Wlrard was riding In th»
basket, rising every moment fartbei
and farther into the sky.
And that was the last any of their
ever saw of Oz, the Wonderful Wizard,
though ho may have reached Omaha
safely, nnd be there now, for all we
know. Hut the people remembered
him lovittgly, and said to one another I
•'Or was always our friend. When
he was hero he built for us this beau
tlfttl Emerald City, and now he Is1
he has left the Wise Scarecrow! whai
COUNTRY WHOSE SOIL SPELLS
WHEAT AND OUT OF WHOSE
FARMS THOUSANDS ARE
GROWING RICH.
grown successfully up to the slxMet!
' in the years to mi cyot:. ’
vacant land will he taken at a rate
of which you nave at present no con- j
ception. We have enough people In
the United States alone, who want
homes, to take up this land.
“What you must do In Western Can-
ada is to raise more live stock. When A
the birth or
CHRIST
Sunday Sde-ul L».o" D,c 25’ 1935
Vll
&pKl»ll, Hrrangsd (or T*1'5 Papor
‘Pi.1 c
| ycu are doing what you ought to u I
gone
to rule over us.
for many days they grieved
PRESIDENT TAFT
OTHERS THINK OF CANADA.
in this regard, the land which is no
! selling for $20 per acre will be wor"
AND from $50 to $100 pre acre. It is
Matt. 2:1-12-
Memory
fKSSON TEXT.
verses. "■ .VT And thou shall call
(501.Dl-.N HkVr- i ( (thall B.,vt. „t9 peo-
over the loss of the Wonderful Wizard
and would not be comforted.
CHARXVffl-
Awcvy to the
good land as that which is soiling for
more than $100 per acre in the corn
be‘\' would rather raise cattle In West-
ern Canada than In the corn belt of
the United States. You can get your
food cheaper and the climate Is bet-
Our Canadian neighbors to the north j ter for the purpose We have a bet-
Another Fat
Year for the Canadian
West.
his name Jesus. • i;«i.
,l„ from their .-ins. ^Matt.l-
TXME— Dccenibei H. *
SOI/th & - ’ | sfturccs*go"t•> "t^otai^d I ................
Dorothy wept hlt.eriy at the ..... ' **
of her hope to get home to Kanaai- ^ egUmatcd that $100,000,000
again; but when she thoitght t a ^ tWg year go lnlo ,he pockets of
over she was glad she had not gone up ^ Westprn farmers from wheat
in a balloon. And she also felt so y ,mol her $00,000,000 from oats
at losing Or, and so did her compute j white ^tui-ns from other
ions. , crons and from stock will add $40,-
Tho Tin Woodman came I d t n(|O|0(l0 moro. i„ it any wonder then
said: ,j i !. i that the fanners of the Canadian
•■Trillv I should be ungrateful ir „
lrul5 who gave i West are happy?
Wtntor wheat
be grown in one-half of the coun-
alfalfa and one of tho varieties
clover in three-fourths of it. The
farmers do not believe this, but it is
sninll
ivn flve or olx n»iW» :
Suggestions and Practtca. Thoug^^
A r^e rSoi -- EUSU--A.I
th.ougb the Bible we
this earth on messages
taught in Hebrews
-
trtlpd upo'ii hi* pole
rlvor The wcarerrow wi»h <•
and,v.rhrkD-r:!
■leep. Tho -------
e «
icued hy
h poppy
. to fall
powers. The lion fefi sstcsP
ftcnvy to Itn. was left <»»aj ^
woodmsn
WftB lei l '
-ettow ttrlcli whlcb
I lie road CiV yBlhjw nnun *I“wVm cat anil
A'lmontlil CIIV they mH a '' Ul, w|Ut
[u.|d mi, c. •rim woodman klllra
The woodmaneKn,w,.
he Bent thouBanda
lid
tiiu(
Tin
queen mou
her mice HUbject?*
from the poppy
from her long
on the Kmer-
cBtno to a fence.
There were fttmpro '»r
b q
fthe bciiL th
to draw the lion away
held. Dorothy awoke n
itloen Tliev Btarted lignin
nld Oily road They «•» *-
Minted green. H here w>‘rt
Breen, houseu of green and l1
in green. It waa the Land ''r "
met the Kimrdlun ut tlm , 'it
•cilbert the power ot tho Wiraro .
AH pot on gi.cn s|hc “.J-,1” pit nlml
»>f the part
Breen roi
ih« beheld an enonm;-- - u„.
ody, leg, or "rm*0lhlXrg're*;’ nmt
\ he:
ty each day. All were |»u
ooinn Dorothy wont to th« th
r»ut
rone
farmers
failed to mourn for the ^ to | Thousands of American
me my lovely heart. 1 sho I. sl,ttied in the above mentioned
Then
Tin Woodman wept for several min
iites. and she watched the tears care
fully and wiped thorn away with to
towel. When he had finished he
thanked her kindly and oiled himself
thoroughly with his jeweled oil can, to
guard against mishap.
The Scarecrow was now the ruler or
the Emerald City, and although he
methods for profitable farming
President Taft said recently in
speaking of Canada:
“We have been going ahead so rap-
idly in our own country that our heads
have been somewhat swelled with (he
idea that we are carrying on our shoul-
ders all the progress there Is in the
world. We have not been conscious
on the north a young
visiting
rnc*cv We are----
t.', ■¥** -B spi/ltf
sent Iona to do service] for the sake
of them that shall inher.it salvatlotn"
It requires no great strtiln on the im-
agination to conceive of the three wise
men coming to earth to\see together
1 with us what the King th^y had sought
true.” , | and found had been dollfiK all these
Keeping pace Pr™ac; centuries since that wonderful visit.
tion, tue growth of railways has he ( W(>vlslt Bethlehem-Describe
quite as wonderful and the » ■ slUlaUon, a„d note what had taken
country from Wlnnipeg to the Ko > hprp especially as city of
Mountains will soon be a net-work or i t
trunk and branch lines. Three great
transcontinental lines are ,.P„ „"q | The”manger in the inn. The angels
construction in every ddrect on and hl8 birth to the shepherds. ‘
at each siding the grain “nr ia ^ ^ ^ q[ (he unsel3> and
to be found. Manitoba bdng the, lnter))1.etatlon ln ,]ohn 3:1C.
first settled province, has Thp Comins 0f the Wise Men.—We
vator capacity of upwards of-a , lhein in the far east gazing at a
bushels. Saskatchewan „0,000.00, and ( ^ ^ ln |hP heaVens. Perhaps they
How Mary and Joseph came
there when Jesus was born.
was not a Wizard the people were that there is —
, . ....---- COUI,try and a young nation that Is
X ^'4
Hi
Ih
Horn, in a eh3?'‘SfcrtW with m„er-
klrtn she beh<*ld onormou* brad
hut body. or arms
bsai.-^ thi t»io» W"f".hi
Llirn sho Killed tho wicked wifi b of
Kant lie would Bend tier boim n
prow, admitted to tho pros, nee U « «"
terrible
and
es Jt.’srsy^ssrb
fcA’S-asS"*
on »>. fi ball of fire and a \ol««* from
Bed bltn couragt* if
The search commenced
JnjfB. Finally
prisoner and
la
ci
Vll’c
the
proud of him. "For." they said, there
i8 not another city in all the world
that Is ruled by a stuffed man. And,
so far as they knew, they were quite
right. , ,
The morning after tho balloon had
gone up with Oz the four travelers
met ln the throne room and talked
matters over. The Scarecrow sat in
the big throne and tho others stopd re-
sportfully before him.
* \Ve are not so unlucky,” said the
new ruler; “for this palace and the
Emerald City belong to us, and we
can do just as we please. When I re-
looking forward, as it well may, to a
great national future. They have
7,000,000 people, but the country is
still hardly scratched.”
Jas. .1. Hill speaking before the
Canadian Club of Winnipeg a few days
ago said :
"I go back for 53 years, when 1
came West from Canada. At that time
Canada had no North-West. A young
hoy or man who desired to carve his
own way had lo cross the line, and
to-day it may surprise you—one out
of every five children born in Canada
member that a short time ago I was ,lyeg Jn the Unlted States. Now you
UP on a pole in a farmer's cornfield^ arp playing the return match, and the
•While I Am Gone the Scarecrow Will
Rule Over You."
1 have to stay shut up in these rooms
all day, and It gels tiresome. I'd rather
go back to Kansas with you and be In
a circus again."
"1 shall bo glad to have your com-
putty," said Dorothy. ^
“Thank,you." he answered. “Now.
will help mo sew the silk to-
uiul that 1 am now the ruler of this I j-orth-West is getting people from the
beautiful city, I am quite satisfied with Unltpd Suit,,s very rapidly. We
brought 100 land-seekers, mainly from
Iowa and Southern Minnesota, last
night out of St. Paul, going to the
North-West. Now. these people have
all the way from five, ten to twenty
The »0i5lm»i> killed 1 |f vou
\u!!S *“d‘kniff. we win begin to work on our
* nmt. hi
woortninn receive !
;«*d rnonknya/tt i>k
tut the
wlnfec .... -
conveyed them to
threw "‘I
wicked witch, /^kcroy-
lmiloou.” ,
So Dorothy took a needio. arm
rffva.l and as fast, as Oz cut the strips
of silk into nrnner sham^Uu^^'
witchery. Dorothy
On the wicked wr.*.... ......._
JnTJrare™"' She found ,ewe,i them neatly together. Firat
charmed golden t0“pmandlo„tU aKe there was a strip ot light green silk
my lot."
"I also." said the Tin Woodman,
-am well pleased with my new heart;
and, really, that was the only thing
1 wished In all the world."
"For my part, I am conlent In know-
ing i am as brave as any beast that
ever lived, if not braver," said the
Lion, modestly.
"Tf liorothy ivc/jV* only bo contented
to live ln the Emerald City," contin
ued the Scarecrow, "we might all be
happy together.”
“But I don’t want to live here,
erled Dorothy. "I want to go to Kan
and live with Aunt Em and Uncle
nnd hc
ed gold
buck to Oz. She
j«cd the
Key who
^orothynr<li»cov«r,'.,l tie « ''•■■iinl ^ ^ y
|LhUmwl«rd "W" the svareernw
hralnn, the woodman a heart ami tht
|ton a courage fluid.
YUP
w,. becai
1 cup to call tho wlnif’d mon-
took them to the Kmeruld t Hy-
trnied cup’h ntory waa told
cove
lie
then a strip of dark green and then a
via.
lienvy.
“Well, then, what can be done, in
tA»/i'e\i' cViV
decided to think,
The Scarecrow
strip of emerald green; for Oz had a. aQd ho thought so hard that the pins
/CHAP xyu
I How the RfcJh
ti/n(
fancy to make the balloon In different
shades of the color about them. It
took three days to sew all tho strips
together, but when it was finished
they had a big bag of gree&alMs more
than 20 feet long.
Then Oz painted it on tho inside
V
and needles began to stick out of his
brains. Finally he said:
"Why not call the Winged Monkeys,
and ask them to carry you over the
desert?” _
“I never thought of that said Dor-
othy, Joyfully. "It's just the thing.
•was L&.i/nth
1
| For thre» days Dorothy heard noth-
ing from Oz. These were sad duyB
tor the little girl, although her triends
(were all quite happy anil contented.
»rhe Scarecrow told them there were
(wonderful thoughts in his head; but
lie would not say what they were be-
toause he knew no one could under-
stand them but himself. When the Tin
, (Woodman walked about he felt, bis
heart rattling around In his breast;
L»nd he told Dorothy he had discovered
(it to be a kinder and more tender
(heart than the one he had owned
'jtvben he was made of flesh. The Lion
w'rttr'aVoat of thin glue, to make it air j.jj go at once for the golden cap
tight, after which he announced that -\vhen she brought it into the throne
the balloon was ready. room she spoke the magic words and
"But we must have a basket to ride sQOn ,he bMUi of Winged Monkeys
in," he said. So he sent the soldier flew *n ->pen window and
with the green whiskers for a big atood boside her.
fastened
clothes basket, which
"This is the second time you have
with many ropes to the bottom of the palled llB” said the Monkey King,
balloon. . bowing before the little girl. "What
When It was all ready, Oz sent word j dQ you wish?
to his people that he was going to
make a visit to a great brother Wizard
who lived in the clouds. The news
spread rapidly throughout the city and
every one came to see the wonderful
sight
“I want you to fly with me to Kan-
sas." said Dorothy.
But the Monkey King shook his
r
head-
"That cannot be done, be said. We
belonK to this country alone and can-
Oz ordered the balloon carried out ngt leave it. There has never been a
in front of the palace, and the people wluge(j Monkey in Kansas yet. and 1
gazed upon It with much curiosity. sappose there never will be for they
Tho Tin Woodman had chopped a big i dou t belong there. We shall be glad
pile of wood, and now he made a fire tQ ,erTe you in any way in our power,
of It. and Oz held the bottom of the but w0 oannot cross the desert. Lood-
halloon over the fire so that the hot I by >.
alr that arose from It would be caught And wlth another bow the Monkey
in the silken bag. Gradually the hal- KlnK spread his wings and flew away
loon swelled out and rose Into tho air tbrough the window, followed by all
until finally the basket just touched h(s ban(1
the ground. Dorothy was almost ready to cry
Then Oz got into the basket and w(tb di3appointincnt.
said to all Ihe people in a loud voice: ..x have wasted the charm of the
"I am now going away to make a goiden cap to no purpose,” she said,
visit While 1 am gone the Scare ..for thP winged Monkeys cannot help
thousand dollars each, and they will
make as much progress on the land in
one year as any one man coming from
the Continent of Europe can make, do-
ing the best he can, ln ten, fifteen, or
twenty years."
It is evident from the welcome
given American settlers in Canada
that the Canadian people appreciate
them. Writing from Southern Alberta
recently an American farmer says:
“We are giving them some new
! ideas about being good farmers and
I they are giving us some new ideas
about being good citizens. They have
a law against taking liquor into the
Indian Reservation. One of our fel-
lows was caught on a reservation with
a bottle on him. and it cost him »50.
One of the Canadian Mounted Police
found hint, and let me tell you, they
find everyone who tries to go up
against the laws of the country.
"On Saturday night, every bar-room
is closed, at exactly 7 ocl°ck:
Because It is the law, and Us the
same with every other law. Th®re
isn’t a bad man in the whole district,
and a woman can come home from
town to the farm at midnight If she
wants to, alone. That's Canada s idea
how to run a frontier: they have cer
tainly taught us a lot.
"On the other hand, we are running
their farms for them better than any
Other class of farmers. I *
can say this without boasting, and the
Caandians appreciate us. u
out to celebrate Dominion Day, the>
are glad to have us help to farm
country; they know how
we know how to work.
Another farmer, from Minnesota.
who settled in Central Saskatchewan
some years ago, has the following to
gay about the country.
My wife and I have done well enough j
since we came from the States ; we can I
live anyway. We came in the spring of
1901 with ihe first carload of settlers
effects unloaded ln these parts and
built the first shanty between bus-
- \Ve brought
Alberta about 7.000.000, while the ca-1
paclty of elevators at Fort William
and Port Arthur, on the Great Lakes,
is upwards ot 20,000,000 more.
Within the provinces of Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and Alberta there are
flour and oatmeal mills with a com-
bined capacity of 25,000 barrels per
dav. and situated along some famous
water powers in New Ontario, there
are larger mills than will be found
anywhere in the Prairie Provinces
Last year the wheat crop totaled
over 100,000,000 bushels. This year
the crop will yield 30,000,000 more. A
recent summary shows that on the 1st
of January. 1909. the surveyed lands
of the three western provinces, totaled
134,000,000 acres, of which about .,2,-
000,000 have been given as subsidies to
railways, 11.000,000 disposed of in oth-
er ways and 38.000,00 given hy the
Canadian Government as free home-
steads, being 236,000 homesteads of
160 acres each. Of this enormous ter-
ritory. there is probably under crop
at the present time less than 11.000,-
000 acres; what the results will be ,
when wide awake settlers have taken
advantage of Canada’s offer and are
cultivating the fertile prairie lands,
one can scarcely imagine.
Public Sentiment Aroused.
Every state west, of the Mississippi
except Idaho, Wyoming, Utah. Ne-
vada and New Mexico has now joined
the light against tuberculosis. State
sanitoria tor the treatment of tubercu-
losis patients have been now estab-
lished in Minnesota, Idaho, Missouri,
Arkansas. North Dakota, South Da-
kotn and Oregon. State Anti-3 ubet-
WH1 tell us why they followed the star,
at such great cost of time and treas-
ure and comfort, over dreary wastes,
amid hunger, and thirst, and cold
and toil, in perils of rivers, perils of
wilderness, perils of robbers;" like
"the queen of Sheba who came from
the uttermost parts of the earth to
hear the wisdom of Solomon; and
behold a greater than Solomon is
here;" like the merchant who sold all
that he had to obtain the pearl of
great price.
What Motives Led Them to Cn-
dertake the Journey?—We are in-
formed hy Tacitus, by Suetonius, and
by Josephus, whose works these wise
men doubtless could have read, that
there prevailed throughout the en-
tire east at that time, an intense con-
viction, derived from ancient prophe-
cies, that ere long a powerful mon-
arch would arise In Judea and gain
dominion over the world. Vergil, who
lived a little before this, owns (fourth
Eclogue) that a child from heaven was
looked for, who should restore the
golden age, and take away sin.
They could have learned more defi-
nitely about this hope from the Jews,
who were scattered everywhere with
their Scriptures and their hopes, since
the Babylonian captivity.
They neded the forgivenes of sins;
and the asurance from God as to the
conditions on which they could be for-
given.
They found the King, not in Her-
od's palace as they expected, but in
a manger in a common village Inn, of
rovnl descent from the Father in
heaven and the royal line of David on
culosis associations have been organ- | h and jn those circumstances
ized and are at work in Washington, | |hrongh whlch he could best realize
Oregon, California, Arizona, Montana, | hw klngdom ln the hearts of men.
Nebraska.
North Dakota. Colorado,
Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Minnesota, j
They expressed their allegiance and
Kansas, uniauum— - ------- - - i ,,.f...Khlu bv gifts, tailing down, wor-
iowa. Missouri. Arkansas and Louis- worship The flr8t,
Inna In all these states, strenuous ef-
forts to wipe out tuberculosis are be-
ing taken. _
Pathos Out of Place in Schools.
worship Of the body; the second, of
the soul: the third, of their goods.
With these three, our bodies, our
souls, our goods, we are to worship
and
In an address at a teacher’s insti- , him.
tuto Miss Martha Sherwood said that ,, with the Wise Men We Draw
■ul and pathetic stories should have’ Tbirty Years Nearer, and Watch the
no place In the public schools. She I Klng Doing His Kingly Work. (Draw
declared the pupils’ great need is hu- ,hP la(.,s from the class.)
morons stories and the kind that Curing sin, disease, sorrow,
make children roll on the ground de[Uh (NalnP instances.)
with laughter. "Anything to make j Tpaphing (;„d’s heavenly truth,
them laugh, and laugh loudly," she !
said. “It makes them grow, puts j
sunshine into their lives and develops i
contented men and women.
0T °S£co^'*DO' f “
Frank .1. Cheney
it v of Toledo. County and state
ESS. 1 thuLflSVV
“'^ll't-SORKO no!.l"Hs""',rP?.’ch and
s ot C*TAII»I1 that cannot hc cured by
Changing men’s lives.
An example of the perfect life.
Giving his life to save men.
Rising from the dead, the proof and
power of immortal life.
Ever-living King and Rederaer;
thus manifested as seeking not his
own honor or wealth, hut giving him-
*W to sen • and bless and. help the
the
to govern;
lUi.t.'s Catarrh ct he.
Sworn to boforc
hi* 6th day of D
FRANK J. CHENEY,
and snbflri
December, A. D.. l
i my prvaence,
Tlbed In
1886.
A. W. GLEASON.
Notary Public.
Internal
crow will rule over you.
I command
said the
.Hy and acta
rtaees of the
you to obey him as you would me.” I .-It certainly too bad!
The balloon was by this time tug tender-hearted Woodman.
„in£ bard at the rope that held It to The Scarecrow was thinking agam,
fb ' -round, for the air within it was and his head bulged out so horribly
hot and this made it so much lighter (hat Dorothy feared 11 would
in weight than the atr without that It | "Let us call in the soldier with the
good
milled "hard to rise Into the sky. I green whiskers," he said, "and ask his had $8001) - - d , d
pulled na ------- crled the Wizard; advlce.” the way of buildings etc., and had
•hurry UP. or the balloon will fly | (TO BE CONTINUED ) .......... three acres of trees.
A Tinamlth.
declared he was afraid of nothing on
*,arth. and would gladly fare an army
of men or a dozen ot the fierce Kalt-
Idahs.
j Thus each of the little party was
satisfied except Dorothy, who longed
^uore than ever to get back to Kansas.
. On the fourth day, to her great
lot «en< f»r her' Bn<J wb*n 8hB entBred
katoon and Lumsden.
with our car of settlers effects e i Desperate But Effective,
sum of $1800 in cash, to-day we are j Knicker_So Jones has a
worth $40,000. We 'proved up one sphpmp,
of the finest farms in Western Canada Hoi.ke, -Yes; he carries a little dy
and bought 320 acres at $3 per acre.
We took good crops off the land foi
four years, at the end of which we
worth of improvements ln
people over whom he is king.
HI. Let Us Watch the Glorified
King Organizing and Developing His
Kingdom. ( As recorded in the Acts.)
The review of last Sunday will fur-
Dial, material for this picture, from
] the day of Pentecost and its gift of
power, through the church at Jerusa-
j (em, ,hr- missions of the apostles and
“Soft and Nice." | of Paul, to the gospel proclaimed and
she—George, dear, do you love me? churches formed throughout the
Ill -Yes, Darling; very much. j known world.
She—Say something soft and nice to ; 1V NV;tb our Wise Men Let Us
mP ' Move Swiftly Down the Centuries, and
j(e_Oh, custard pie!—Judge. ! G!anc., ai What the King Horn at Beth-
lehem Has Been Doing to Change the
away.
“I can't find Toto anywhere,
namite to blow up any auto that runs
over him.
\ dealer sold imitation Spearmint.
His customer pave it to a friend. The ,
— >
Red-Headed Girls and Autos.
---- J "Automobiles and red headed girl*
plied Dorothy, who did not wish to flourish abundantly in this in-
leave her little dog behind. Toto had . Ung climate," says the Roches-
rim into the crowd to bark at a kitten. Democrat and Chronicle, "giving
and Dorothy at last found hine one more p0int of superiority over
picked him up and ran toward Ihe bal c^arlP8tou But will not our con-
loon. , . temporary admit that the Rochester
She was within a few steps of , headed girl flourishes a little too
and Oz was holding out Ills hands lo Abundantly? We think that she
help her Into tho basket, when cracky ^ ^ ^ flyg feet foar 0r five and
went Ihe ropes, and the balloon r0«® | h not ovpr no, but our lmpres
into the air without her. , lhat the Rochester beauty
"Come back! ' she screamed. 1 ^ w the wel*bt of about 140
The ideal is a
want to go, too!"
"I can't come back, my dear, called
Ox from the basket. "Oood-by!
"Good-by!" shouted every one, sod
all eyes were turned upward to
planted three neres
vears ago we got such a good oiler
that we sold our land at $4o per acre.
From the above you will see that we
have not done badly since our ar-
rival"
l’rof. Thomas Shaw of St. Paul. Min-
nesota. with a number of other well
known editors of American tarm jour-
nals. toured Western Canada recently
and in an interview at Winnipeg said
! in part:— , . .
“With regard to the settlement o
the West 1 shimlrt say that it is only
well begun. 1 have estimated that In
Manitoba one-tenth of the land has
been broken, in Saskatchewan
dealer lost his customer,
tomer lost his friend.
The cus-
Kingdoms of This World Into the
Kingdom of Heaven. — What the
Christ-King did while living on earth,
and after his ascension in founding
and developing the early church amid
great opposition of Harods who would
destroy both the King and his works,
and in conflicts with the world pow-
ers of evil under the Roman emperors.
has beeu continued with increasing
I aucces down through the centuries.
What a young man earns in the day | -|-bc bpsj Christmas gift Is to en-
time goes into bis pocket, but what^he ,pr (bp geI-vice of this King; to strive
with all our souls to bring all men
under his benign sway; to labor and
*lve and pray for the coming of his
singdoni in every heart, in every land;
to help the poor near at hand, to com-
spends in the evening goes into his |
character.—Dr. Cuyler.
. sWS; ft^fS.TIA.SSffiS'r'.TOl.ln.
one*
adJ Bom«tlro«B 160
News and Couriw.
1 have lived to know that the great
secret of human happiness is this—
never suffer your energies to stagnate
ARE TOUR CLOTHES FADEDt
tort the sorrowing, to join in the sup-
port. of missions at home and in for-
eign lands; lo be full of enthusiasm
for Iducatlon. missions, social serv-
ice, pure politics, good government.
Use-Rod Cross Ball Blue and make them true religion, and a hundred aspects ot
white again. Large 2 oz. package, 5 cents | tbe Christian ideal."
i Ihirtietn ana i» ”--"7,. , A woman isn't necessarily level
| and seventy-fifth. I am satisfied mat j because her hat is on straight
| ln aii three provinces grain can be p
Let this Christinas feeling last *11
the year round.
J
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Bell, F. C. The Lincoln County Journal (Stroud, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, December 24, 1909, newspaper, December 24, 1909; Stroud, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc925263/m1/6/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.