The Social Democrat. (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 84, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 15, 1913 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Socialist Newspapers and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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O 00000000®00«® 0!hon»®- Thus the Socialist party 0O0000000000000
an /Jt platforms, In all nations, among the 0 0
FATHER JON KM 0|preparatory demands called Politi- 0 YOUNG 1'OI.KS COLUMN {flj
jg, COLUMN. 0 cal Programme, the abolition of the ^ 0
£. I L’PPer Houses Is a prominent propo- ^$$$$$$
j©t ©£$00000000000 <9 aition. There have been upper houses
~ " ZL ■ ^ abolished, and others shorn of pow- V LIVE MCARECROW.
THE SOCIALIST MOVEMENT, so- ers, and others threatened, but as yet
CIAL1SM AND THE SOCIALIST all this movement is outside of and When I was a boy sixty years ago
PARTY. Independent of the Socialist party. I was for two Bummers a "Shepherd
___ It is the unconscious Socialist move- Hoy" for a farmer in Ohio who kept
Loose and careless observers seeta j jnent, acts and agitations by men an I several hundred sheep. My duties
to think these are one and the same organizations who and which would I wete to walk about the fie M and
thing, but they are distinct and sep- scout the name of Socialism. see that no dogs frightened n.o
000000000000000
0 0
Q WOMAN’S COLUMN.
0 0
0 0000000000000 ik
FIRST WOMAN JUDGE IIAS I1KKN
APPOINTED IN NORWAY.
Christiania.—Frau Sorenson lias
been appointed a judge at Hammer-
fast. the first woman to occupy a
seat on the Norwegian bench.
0 0000000000000 0 i P*r m,ne reKlfm of '1 ichigan. 0 0000000000000 0
The men are on strike for better 0 0
£ NATIONAIi NOTES. ^ living conditions. 0 ARKANSAS STATE NOTES ^
•jy ^ It is conceded that tlie demands 0
0 000000*^000000 0 !of th<“ "»«» i*r’' ?“«• Th* conscious- 000000000000000
i * -- ness of a Just cause has given the - ——
\ r.tMPVKiN I’oit ME.MREUsHIP. strikers the courage to fight without FINANCIAL REI*ORT FOR OOTO
-------- violence, notwithstanding every of-i HER, l»!8.
The October reports from the Na- ' Tort lias been made to trick them into -
tional office : how a gain in party ! a situation where a massacre can bo Cash received for dues
■ • 15,000 since gives the color of Justification stamps * 45.75
membership of over
Juno let, bringing the total mem
Women arid girls have been assault- Cash received for secretary's
arate. AH over the world amt writ-
ten o nthe page of history before So-
cialism as a word U.'.T oeon coined or
used, there has been a growth in
governments, laws, and society.
Though slow, it has been constant,
and today we call it the Socialist
movement. This growth in outward
forms and institutions has been due
to the growth In the minds Of men
The powers of the House of LordB flocks an 1 to report to the owner
of England have been curtailed and any accidents that might happen to
Air. Asquith and his associates
threaten to abolish it.
In Canada thee opposition to the
senate is growing stronger and more
threatening every day. In New
the lambs or ewes. Of course I had
other duties to discharge also, such
as digging out thistles from the
meadows, and removing sticks that
might do injury to the mowing ma-
Zealand a bill proposes to make their chine. I am here reminded of an
upper house elective as we have made
our senate just now. So much for
of a higher conception of what gov- the English speaking people. In
ernments, laws and society ought .<> Italy there Is an active campaign to
be. This ideal, thus indistinctlyj make the senate elective. in
seen, 1 denominate the Socialist Ideal, ltussia the upper house is being bit-
er Socialism. jterly attacked. In Germany the
Hut the Socialist party is due to ! Liberals and Social-Democrats are
the fact that men and women or ,v ' united to make the Bundesrath elec-
clearer intellectual vision, ( probably j five.
because less trammeled with eon-j In Egypt, the Kedive lias amended
vent ion a 1 theories) have conceived a the law of 1883 to abolish their up-
clear, clean cut, vision of what the, per house. Everywhere there is a
two other forms of the allied forces, j growing demand urged by men, not
either saw but dimly, or were in all j Socialists, to curtail the powers,
probability unconscious of any sight; make elective, or abolish upper
at ail, but acted upon a sort of blind j houses, and this mainly by reform-
instinct. Socialists, or the active j ers and not Socialists.
old custom in force in England in
the long ago. Grows in that country
annoyed and damaged farmers at
certain times of the year by eating
the seeds planted Many farmers
put up “scare-crows" of various de-
vices in the fields, but often they did
no good, in many instances they
employed boys* to hover about the
fields and scare away the crows by-
making a noise w-ith a simple "con-
trivance" called a “clapper.” The
custom was once quite common but
has about been abandoned. A news-
! paper correspondent recently toll
| the following a bout one boy who is
1 still employed to act as a live “scarv
:crow.” He says he came across him
'not far from London. lie was vlgor-
Women now have full suffrage in
the following states:
Wyoming. Colorado, Utah. Idaho,
Washington, California, Oregon,
Kansas, Arizona, Alaska. Illinois.
An amendment providing for wo-
man suffrage is now before the vot-
ers of the following states:
Goes to
House. Senate. Voters.
hership of the party io over 100,000 j ed; men have boon shot, going about
* ♦ » j their peaceful pursuits. Yet the
every devoted party member.
j approaching cold.
If they are not
The weakest point in the Socialist j perish and they may be defeated, and
movement in this country has alwu.vs : with them, the whole American la-
been the party organization. Then I her movement This is an attempt
to increase this membership ought to
become the absorbing work of the
to destroy the Western Federation
of Miners .one of the most radical
Montana ............
75-2
15-2
1914
pour money into propaganda in an
Nevada ...........
4 9-3
19-3
1914
increasing stream;
win over multi-
North Dakota.
1914
tildes of voters and
then fail to fol-
South Dakota
70-30
4 1-2
1914
low up our work by
getting our vot-
An amendment
providing
or wo*
ers into the party.
man sorfrake has passed
one
Iegisin-
* *
•
csss x,r:xrx ■ jzzr r xz s r -r.: - -
they want it, and they are endued roads lead to Rome," and so all re-’
with the faith that it is practical and j forms are not Socialism, but roads
are united for the purpose of ob- that lead to Socialism. Socialism is
tabling it. I not reform, it is revolution, it is the !
I want to speak of the uncon- j turning upside down of present gov-
scious Socialist movement. I say un- ernments, society and economical
crows rose from a
; broad field of young wheat like a
i flight of black aeroplanes.
He is Willie Taylor, and ever since
: he left school three years ago bird-
j scaring has been an important part
of his work on the farm. "They tell
roBVtous, tuvsteu.,. ...u wuo- ,. - hp 8aId, -that , am the only
atelv form, will aid in reform, but men - . , ....
J 1 , ■ live scarecrow here about London, i
1n un f«u up «pp the birds cather "bo understand Socialism are not., . _ .
In , fie tan we me uuu» i 'don’t know of another boy using an
in flocks to migrate to a warmer fooled by the claim that reform U b|rd.flapper so near hereabouts,
dime. We say its instinct. Now l| Socialism. They know it Is but a ' ^ lonply hprp |f| the fleld8 all
hold, that as the human embryo rep-1 step towards Socialism. ,„ay> and I'm not allowed to real
resents in its growth all the many j Our roads used to be privately jwhile rni at work though 1 like
previous organic forms that step by I owned, and toll gates collected prof- j reading. But sometimes other bovs
step, during vast ages, the Supreme j its for their owners, and the move- jcome and git bv me and that pa48es
Architect of the Universe, has built ment for public roads was fought by ,hp tjmp After dugk aud whenever
up that human .temple of residence the reactionaries, but who today there |sn., bird-scaring to do, I help
for a part of his spirit to acquire in- could be elected to office on the jn the farmyard wlth the horses, and
dividuaiity, personality and seif: proposition to return to private own- jany other WOrk. j d nke to work with
mastery, aud that tints in us resides jership? Even public roads opened {lhe p art8 aIU, lhp teai08 alwayB. 1
all the heredity of the instinc- 'of our and run by the state were formerly ; get Ss a wppk T10.v___nmslor s ju8t
animal ancestors. Just so, man has. ' done by the issue of bonds, then ad- j„iven me a rajse of 2g-..
underlying his power of reason, in-1 vertisements for bids, then contracts, j* Thouj?h he spends'his davs in the
stlnctivc impulses that act uucon- then tax levies, the* the gathering of wheat fipldB w|thin eight miles of
sciously, and that there has been j the taxes, sinking funds, etc., etc.,! Pal|,.g young Taylor has oniv
un unconscious aggr egate instim t and ail along the way graft, inter- I bee„ ^ jnto London once> and
operating on men as a mass, tliatjest, rake off. and hoodie, but *Msi]l0 8ppaks of tl,at as quite an event,
has produced what we note as Rov-jyear -’50,000 men turned nut in Mis- „ wag when he went with one of the
ernmcnVal, legal, and social evolu-j souri, 400 miles of ro; ds were made,!farm parts with a load of vegetables
tion. But for this, man would not! and 51.500,000 bond issue avoided. I fo convpnt Garden. His eyes sparkle
progress, ami men art divided into yet no one cried out Socialism, re- V, ,bp thought that, ho Is getting to
what we call reactionaries, reform- digian would be destroyed, free love L, a bJg, Rtrong fellow f and will soon
ers, progre »ives, radicals and revo-! Instituted, or the home destroyed, j gQ wUh lbo part8 as a regular part
iutlonists. just in proportion as thotcjThis was part of the unconscious^,. h(g work That will be life iu-
divine instincts are cither inactive Socialist movement. When educa-
embryonic, or developed either in tion for women was proposed in
part, or in a more or less active con France, the titled reactionaries op-
dition. 1 can In no other way account posed it, and said il would disrupt
for the fact that men who profess the home and society, but it didn't,
atheism, and an entire luck of faith Here is the United States the men
lure and will be submitted to anoth-
er during the next t'vo years in the
following stales:
Goes to
House. Senate Voters.
Iowa ............. 81-36 31-15 lhtO
New Jersey .... 46-5 14-5 1816
New York ........125-5 40-2 1915
Pennsylvania .131-70 26-22 1P1S i
Petitions initiating the question of >
woman suffrage of toe voters arc
now under way in the following
states:
(hour. We have been tireless propa- and militant labor organizations in
gandists, but poor organizers. We | the country. The Federation is one
full support of Socialists
To this end your executive com-
mittee lias ordered this call for help
great neisd.
Send remittances to Socialist par-
ty. Ill North Market street, Chicago
Acknowledgement will be made pub-
lic in the Party Builder.
WALTER LANFKRS1EK.
Executive Secretary.
THE CONVENTION.
Now just watch the ‘ Brains" of j
the democrat party, mix tip the
We are not poor or niggardly in
our gifts to the movement. Ameri-
ca probably even leads Germany in
total amount of money spent on So-
cialism for a given year, but the
Gentians, with their better organiza-
tion, get more for their money ex-
pended.
• • •
II has often been said that the
! American is essentially an individ-
j uaiist, and lienee naturally averse to
'organization and co-operation. This
Missouri ............................
Nebraska ......................
Ohio .................................
if your state is not on this list it
tv ill be added during <:lv next two
years, and the Socialists should "beat
the other party to it."
salary ......................
56 15
Cash >-eeeived for supplies
1.85
Cash received for special
.76
Cash received for Worker
subscriptions ...................
59
Total ........ ...............
$105.00
Deficit November 1 ..........
50.68
Total ..................
$165,86
Disbursements.
iPald for dues stamps............
$ 25.00
li’uul for phone .................
2.56
Paid for telegraph ................
.55
(Paid for express ...... ............
2.55
Payment on filing system .
5 00
Paid for rent ...............
7.00
Paid for postage ..................
18.61
Paid for Worker subscrip-
tlons ......................
.50
Paid for secretary's saliary .
56.15
Total expense ...................
$117.98
Deficit October 1 ..............
37.68
Total ..........
Total membership
561
$156.66
October,
1914 may be true, but magnifying the fact medecian to administer to the work-
1 914 j will not solve
problem. We era of Louisiana in the coming eon-
l.ixnls Organized f’uting October.
Failsvillc. six members. .1, L. Bale*,
»c< retary; organizers, Will Lane, J.
1914 (must meet lhe difficulties by working j ventlou. \ ea.
\nd you workers v t'lark.
Vilena, five member*. R. L. Says,
l\ 8. WILL ESTABLISH WOMEN'S
DEPARTMENT.
Washington.—A special depart-
ment to care for the interests of
farm women will soon be established
by the department of agriculture of
the national government. This is
the result of the replies received
from an inquiry which was recently
sent to thousands of women living
on farms.
FARMING FOR WOMEN.
deed!—R. A Hague.
or hope in anything beyond this ani- who proposed free
mai existence, who .vet cherish so de- were mobbed, and It was declared
vout an attachment to conceptions a dancer and a menace, but today
of justice, right and a higher view our public schools are hailed as the
of this life, that they will logically great defense and safety of the na-
tion y their materialistic philosophy ton. and only the economic and ro-
und sacrifice even life in defense of ligioua reactionaries are fighting
GRAFT BEHIND \ KM AMENT.
Winston Churchill, head of Brit-
ish navy, recently made a novel
public schoolsipropol,iMon Germany. He pro-
ideals.
Reason is conscious, instinct is un-
1 against them.
Our public schools and socialized
conscious. in some men like Dar- mail service are parts of the So-
*•’11 and Haeckel reason seems '.>
blunt and smother instinct. In other*
like Loyola. Torquentada. and all rc-
Halist movement.
No nation today, in view of the
present day facts, can be deemed in
lP-lous fanatics, theological dogmas s‘op with modern civilization that
crush out tite impulses of all but in- lias privately owned railroads and
stincts of tin lower animal passion . telegraphs as we have here in the
In men like Morgan, Ryan and United States. The aggregate in-
stinct of civilized humanity makes
posed that neither Germany or
England buiid war vessels for two
years. The suggestion embodies
these words: "Scores of millions of
money will he rescued for the prog-
ress of mankind."
riiurchil! suggested that this meas-
ure would make tite armament
firms servants of the goverment in-
stead of their masters."
The German emperor rejected the
proposition It will be remembered
that only rc, >ml> S >< iaiists of
Germany disclosed the close rela-
tionship existing between tht> emper-
or and the Krupp gun works. Could
it be possible that the Krupps in-
fluenced the emperor in this de-
ed - ion
Socialist1- have for many wars de-
clined that the nations could dis-
arm with great henefit to the world
and with perfect safety to tijetsi-
ehei- Tills proposition. coming
maney-mad "frenzied financiers
greed crushes out the instincts, and for progrem, for reform, and progres-
blunts and dulls and distorts their and reform, makes for Socialism -is
ideals of justice, etc. But men whom an ideal, and advances towards S i-
greed, fanaticism, nor other reac- i cdalism as a concrete fact,
tionary causes, do not bar the way. We all know that Bismarck. i:t
are gifted with what we term an in- order to head off the rising Social-
nate sense of right and justice. Men Democratic party, gave government', ( h-wd "t
are convinced that honesty is the best ownership oi railroads, telegraphs. ' . ( dj (pK |ha,
principle rather than policy, and that old age pensions, laws that abolished . whenever tii
conviction is an Instinct, and springs the slums of German cities, etc . but
not from reason Men are therefore ■ instead of heading off the So ial-
divided into reactionaries more or Democratic party, these reforms were
less violent. < r into the many differ- object lessons that spoke a propu-
ent grades of progre-slves, reform- ganda for Socialism more effective
ers, radicals and revolutionaries just than pamphlets or speakers, and in
as they are measureably influenced a nation, naturally more cotiserva-
by these natural moral impulses. Re- live and reactionary than any. vi’n
a< ‘Sonar !es pride themselves in being the probable exception of ( !
the Cnited Sfa'es 'and I make tl.-s
comparison advisedly after some
on :iii ftx <• of t - ••
t '■ Si,i 1.! I I Irilln
irutie party a.-* d la;*:. liie-
,11'tion of iilsnti'tk was pat" m '
w ot Id isi ist that !n
create must not be us
building usgb-ss war v
version will be at an
ufii th App :i >
controlled and own'd by
H iss, or bv any cl.us ,c- i
• d- mocr.i! it ail; y
Of contributions to the “back to
the soil” literature there have been
many, and, for the most part, they
have come from writers wholly in-
experienced in any phase of farming
and totally unqualified to discuss
agriculture in a practical am: i- di-
ligent way. But octasionally e< : Kr-
one discourses on the subject *\h )
knows what he or she is talking
about, a"d comment from sucii a
source is always interesting and help-
ful. Recently The Journal comaieej
an Interview with Mrs Mabel Miller
of Osceola, Mo., member of the exe-
cutive committee of the Missouri
Woman Farmers’ (Tub, which is so
entirely sensible, so hopeful and
withal so suggestive of possibilities
that it deserves more than passing
notice. As Mrs. Miller points out,
farming is essentially a business,
sentimentally attractive to many, but
nevertheless n business. And as a
business it must be learned, or fail-
ure is inevitable. in the fact tha
modern farming is not difficult :o
learn if the student brings to its
study .» fair degree of ititeliigi-tic \
devotion and determination lb-s mi
hope of so mnnv who are yi.uoTi,:
and planning to retire some day to
country life.
The uneasy tide of humanity or a
stantly moving from the farms to 'he
cities and hack again needs to be
chicked it y- and girls -lioiiid be
attracted to the farms by improve-
ment in conditions tiiat would .oa-
ternet th*- temptations of tin* '-ay
To this end splendid agricultural
tor-
:
all the harde-. twill have to swallow the whole
* « * ! thing, they have got you tied. The ysecretarv; self organized.
Propaganda will always take care demoetat parly believes so much In Wynne, ten member*, J. A. Ma'on,
of It elf -that Is our people are so democracy that they will not even secretary; T. P. Laughlin, organizer,
ready to .-gitate Hint no extra nrg- let you voters approve their work. Rogers, ten members. J. A. Doke,
itig along this line i. necessary. It When they finish the work of amend- secretary; Sam Buseler, organizer,
is the organization work that must ing the constitution at this oonven- Haroldton, 57 members. J Taylor,
be pushed and constantly »timulated. tion. it will be finished iso will you decretory; W. LeFevre, organizer.
* • • workers). There will be nothing for. Mein be rs-n«-Large.
It is fitting and proper that the you voters to do except go ahead J. A. Smith, W. T. Talley, L. D.
National office should lead in this and dig up cash to pay for It, and you > Bakes, J. B. Edwards. A. J. White,
wu'-k for the rise or fall of the party will have to dig up about $25,000.- il. T. Cole, G. A. Brown, F T. PM1-
member hip. measures and bounds "00. But that's easy, eh? But • lips, Peter Iburg, 1. R. Hardin, O. H.
the work that tho party Is able to hes<> delegates, "brains of the demo- Burke, E. C. Johnson. F. K. Thomas.
t0, crat party." have too much brains W. D. Lamb, M. G. Thomas, M.
* • • ! to do any of the digging except In Houser. J. B. DtiBols, W. W. t.'had-
The steady rise in membership your jcketbook. Don't expect them wick. J. B. Smith; all proposed by
since June interpreted by the Na-jto help you with anything hut advice T P. Laughlin.
tional office to mni a response rojto savt your money, grow lots of j
the campaign carried on. mostly by (children, etc. This convention will:
correspondence and leaflets, for more be composed absolutely of democrats, j
extensive party work. And now a I ho
forward movement In every section (gobs of "efficiency” to ooze front it.
seems to be on. Old members are’JUST WATCH.—H. N . Shreveport,
re-instating and new- ones being add-j Louisiana.
ed. Locals arc making membership j ——-----——
solicitation an order of business, j \ M'HISM IN LABOR BANKS.
( "Join the party" is becoming a domi- , ----
riant thought. At this juncture, we I'nion Representative* to Urot.-d oldton. November 19. Klbler;
have thought it well to suggest that j Against a New Workmen's vember 20, Alma; November
! December be made a month of in- Organization. j Dyer; November 22. Mulberry;
■tensive organization work and ,o| A schism in union labor ranks was vember 23. Dora; November
help fix the thought ot the party revealed this morning wiieit Frank Itndy; November 25, llnlths;
membership on the work to be done Walsh and James Aylward. attorneys‘'venther 26, Lancaster; November 27,
and to stimulate interest, the Nation representing the unions in the Build- Mountainherg; November 28, Ches-
al office has inaugurated a member- ing Trades Couneil. appeared before ter; November 29. Armada; Novem-
ship campaign, the details of which Judge Thomas in the circuit cottr her 30, Klmea: December 1, Leez
arc published in the current Issue of and filed a protest against tiv
Speakers’ Dates.
M M Ferguson.—November 18,
therefore we can lot ; for great Ward; November 19-20, Jackson-
ville; November 21, Brownsville; No-
vember 22-23-25, Cabot; November
i 25, Watcnsaw.
! Samuel T. Patton—Ashley Coun-
ty, November 1-10.
I Dora Meru.- November 18, Har-
No-
21.
No-
24.
No-
the F’arfy BuiMc r.
t’rrel December 2, Natural Dam;
rrantinx of a charter to tin* Nathm I jloconihor Tnion Town; December
* • • i Asoclatlon of I’nltcd fiuildinit La
If may hr* said that this method of , bor.
exciting iiilercst. is spectacular. The1 Xpplieaifon for a decree of incor-
spectacular has ever been character- poration for the new organization
1st io of our propaganda. We have was made some time ago Judv
raised great sums of money to save Thomas appointed John ! William
individuals from imprisonment and son to investigate the purpose of the
persecution, and wc will doubtless proposed association and make a
do so again many times. We have ! recom mandat ion to the rout
collected special funds to carry on Williamson reported fo the mar' Li -
i rn p a m!»
to charter a
pres ident ial
con tinen* -
ertioiis when the fight urdav recommending that the
Wc f»n« e rats* d Ofm ration be granted
red train to carry our The proposed asso« iatton prop j
randidatus ocross the to bring about a better umbrsta
ing between eniplf»yers and emplo
i. (‘edarvilln; December 6, Dripping
Springs, December f>. Figure Five;
! )eec*mher 7. \’an Btiren.
1 nnouiicement*.
(’ontruds Laughlin has gone from
Ark annas to the Third Dlftrict, Kan-
san
t’omrade Patton of Loulftiana, i*
in the state and will stay so long a*
we can use him He Is doing splen-
did organization work in Ashley
* on n tv, and comnides deal ring his
service-* should write him at Crowett.
Comrade II. H. Davis of IMgelOW
great nation *
olb-ic* . rt
rn ah:
tain «-t! sti i
. too. s*'u-,s thi- ^
he pfat**« a
io? the;
) un- doing
ork* Tr o! ■
1
semiabn-
r i". i f
\' iH t ha ■
wealth
, : ,-.11 H!
J Hi graft f
- !>,. *
1 :i on ? U>
Nu I no
a }
i 11 \ •
wav to
a s p i r i n •
All
done
sen th.!
have I*
to b<»«
port an
an Mi'
t (Of!
th
here j»p
Hut on
?liing v
ever on
Zf f 11 4 '
e. >N il h
* •
: without using the
weapon of tho
lies a
new moving picture outfit an 1
iniisl tii
incs wc have
strike
it proposes to revolve info i*«
is open for dates. Comrade Davis is
m«»*t y\
i? a L mo** C8-
ranks
any noon In r
of 1ho build in c
on<> of thi> old war horses and has
have mi
:>t < 1 o11(•. W»
tradfh
w ho is not a f
t Hated with am
stood
by tin- rnovornont faithtully.
history trM
organiza? ion tha? u?
*4-s tha? weapon.
( orma
desiring’ hf® nor vices should
i •,fif
grcatcHf 1 m-
which
moan* that it
any considerable
writ <*
him. iMgoiow
f wind!
S» iaiisin i»
?i um 1><*
r joi:^ th$-y \
must Hrst with-
ronirade* fno l-Hticaiter aud W.
th«* pa
rf v organua
draw i
Torn tlo unio
\! F«
iciiMiii . Ilald Knob are noth
The
atforo ♦ > * rt
pre sont »?ig t io*
doiriK
•It' piopagsnda vorx and
• •
Building Trad* a '
'ouio i! told *hf-
should
•■mi d.-sitc speakers addr-*zs
ha? wi
f can do Ifv
< for rt
th.v ?h$ to w
organlzat ion,
? h<-m
ing a rn uiHi
|»40 O t 4
* d. would ok*.an the lo^cnni
1 Kat'erfeld of Chicago, di-
-x , ;
\ o-f)i , nt. ,(?,-
of wai
and <>f Mi
, [,;<--«cir s‘ i’i■ l
-1. »r
<>r 'In- Narional Lycem, »iil
on building
ard o
» oi--ktiiHiisliiti
, -, ■! :. ;
bo in
th>- x ate during January it
ion*.
Judg. Thom
. -•■rifti •!
'A i!
locai much good to
HI It MM. HI MM s>.
“practical men,** and from the re-
former to the poet, the sage, the seer,
the radical and the evolutionary years of resident-
rises a graded set of >teps differing < outtm ots k s:il!
only in degree but not m kind. A
man may use lus reason to justify
vd.
>p!f
:>nD
\-
■s*. Ever* step the reactionaries ciatlsm
bis lUBfin -ts. but his insi|n<*tB
Strong, will overrule ci:* f 1 mi,
domina!*' b!s iite Th*» aggregate
this impulse of instinct, tend?
prog
fight and throw bars in the way.
One of these bars Uk governmental
forms is wh.d is called with us the
XL S. Senate, in England, the Hon •
of Lore-, in HusjsV* the round! of
the Empire, in Gt i anui.i the fliii d*?-
f$ra i In Egypt the General As-crri-
b!y, in niL the upper house
To Socialists It is unnecessary to
explain the meaning and function of
upper houses; nee know that they
ad*4*is the dignity that i* mm d to
a h; pacri'.kal morale i<iwv*
if partially S:»?
kJlij mum. So, i tidr
.,f om». out government
t<> : f:o* ernnient capitaii Hi.
n f r c h
d no?
pei
v h
! I;rv
>ph\ 1’
ufL n
sal to
a’i th
right
p 'molar«
'* that is
Thu Oernaan
practsul men
-•tfnets are dull. av i w Y
psvchicaJy dead ai l iner*. fiiilc I
undersTand or com p! eh*' J
askni vV ion 1 licit i?* H (in- >ih iu.i
want'*** and r#»e«*lved »ho re pH “1
* ji ’ 5 51.<$ rau* d r it. e c m, ■ v " *
WiHrti th» B ill Marttf platfn
stole 1"*“ pot it it il dx man J*. in
great j,art. of the tC.'-isU t natty
m
>mi i :;<■ i "lit r<
s' u. ■ -
1 p di: it 'il r ’
p tvrrof'i. it
art- equ:t! a
{<■. it»- rt;.
■j,. fit on mi
GOING DOWN'
; i. '
uukr a datf " ith him.
J r TD tnip-oii of Toxarkana. i*
i . .-Tut Mil* r County and is u>-r
Mi flatus in othor jia-ts of Cio sioo.
:.*>r« i* no bf'trr spraKet tn.a
r d'- Thompsou.
ID A 01,1 'TION*•.
*;,-x.-I,-,' ?;•»: t!> v
t : old! ton ts 4- -x , i ,,: s, ) •
* r ,, n - ! ■ ,>« ,-»>H of
r*f* it* (one'Utica* sr* lat<$
:>wk—m>6 :•*;■ r?
million v . ■; r
: -*!: >a . *
■d t •; \ t , -.xi
.1 <I< mot rat
t)o- “"d
i '
h lii'.iar, r*
p.ur
an iuiiS ass the ?•-•» vrnint.-tu is , ir.it. LED.
■ i’-
Dvti'i . in S v: tho eo- ' - ii
.Th* -oof that «pr«ad ovvr the !<nt|
.i-.vi-d w.th roo t.t i-x»*itt»-t« grain bios »titi oft,
■ t I i nad ■! :L t ’ - • ■' i- imic: * mot ts in s h-.J
i. >at die side at Use auwclore.
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Merts, Dora. The Social Democrat. (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 84, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 15, 1913, newspaper, November 15, 1913; Iola, Kansas. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc941651/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.