The Choctaw Herald. (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 10, 1913 Page: 2 of 4
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THE
CHOCTAW
(Weekly)
I.I)
(■
mud
-OBE 0. CURD, Eiu, "
But do we deem the nation com- of the present on.
plete and finished? These venera- 10 the great tract;
NovMar' -t l!.U.ratltl,''!^toffl tS h°re COnqUered * th« lnU" '' : 'V*- Mrs! I >7 B^CoUey has been sick
lU.ro, 01;la . .«• of , „ngre.s.- «eld hav« U!i « example of eous peace, f that prosperity which the past week, but it reported some
The March ; 1 s, o. devotion Cud utter sacrifice. They lies in the people's hear and o3t- better
aliz. wel? wHttnir to die that the people lasts all wars and errors if men. Mr.'and Mrs. Tom Harris have a
nAi ^1 ! [ a \ p ap t\* ih\' i v/'c might live. Hut their i« /lunu ( ome l l lit. J, i i • . aft
HILL NEWS,
nd then some
Ho not' ROCK
Put the harness j Rain. rain-
Lift your eyes I rain.
Of I tie yet to be .Mrs. Ed Avery is very sick
$1.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE
Published Every Thursday.
realiz
is no.
three
deten
crop.
Fimrgo, Okla., Thursday. July 10, 191.'!.
the b
whicK
comp ste today printing the speech
Ye' il ' !1t \\ il> i; delivi ;ed on the
'night live. But their task is done.1 Come, let us be comrades ar„1 ™l fine boy, born July 3d
I heir day is turned into evening, i diers yet to serve our fellrtv. men in We are about thrnno-h i„.,i v.
They look to us to perfect what they quiet council, where the M i, here and crops are lookm^fine.
ii The First National Bank
£
Hugo, Oklahoma
ans of the two armies
the blue and the grey
th president and
s he spoke. It is a
nd it ;. w 1 worth your
la:th to the
hims' '
pj.like t niirino
plow101!1 1
moi#laslt*''P'
moriinie to read it.
doin O
with '' 's reported thu i gentleman
shalesiding in the !■ , > place went
be du^ at < iu e a'u! I: weed after
one eaditur in TI, H- aid last wee!, that
you? man f, nd a a si of whiskey on
wev1 ''lt in a nea by town when he
tUrb"t the weed- off,
: *n o—
Pari rhi fiscal year has •-.•run with the
cheo'ty a,in-, tstratioi and it would
prune Arm on i.and sale
<tablished. Their work is handed ! trumpets is neith
j nn to us, to be done in another way, ed and where the
but not in another spirit. Our day which make bits
i is not over; it is upon us at full tide, the world in peaci
Have affairs paused? Does the and love.
nation stand still ? Is what the fif-!
ty years have wrought since those
days of battle finished, rounded out.
and completed? Here is a great
people, (rreat with every force that
has ever beaten in the lifeblood oi
mankind. And it is secure. There
is nif one within its borders, there
is no power anions the nations of the
arth to make it afraid. But has it
?t squared itself with its own great '■ Mississippi Choctaw
tanilards set up at its birth, when ' 160 acre- E 1-2 of
r heard nc
things ar
id the nations
and righteousn
heed-
done
1'inah, I did try feeding those I j I
least, they feil themselves; j !
- 7
trot abotK ten or fifteen bushels I J !
ii
The following allotted land
l.e offered for sale at public auction
at the office of CHALES BOZAKTH,
FIELD CLERK. AT HUGO, OKI A.,
at o'clock P. M„ SATURDAY,
JULY 26th, 1913.
Case No. 1749—Seaby Primus,
roll No, 432.
ection 24, and
thfiy
f corn, some cotton seed and four
j:,i- of my peaches. How much
more do they need?
We all went berry picking last
• Saturday, and got a fine lot of seed
■ il! ticks and chiggers.
TULIP.
j | Capital, $50,009.00
Surplus. $fO,000.0,!-.
serv
lease the people to hav
won"'' v ar f m n.'• : lat
aroporks system had paid i
cottP the city for the year,
absolutely no r, a why
a report
)ur water
dividend
There i
this can
■yjot be door v I, t business
men
cryi
0f C' have n the . ouncil.
gre:
enii Hugo now ha.- a bsfll team in the
can ' e. ,e. I et'.- boost it just
full^e Hugo boost rything and
sha,Cfsv her • ot ne -trike towns
• can suppoi
it made that first noble, naive appeal | E 1-2 of N'E 1-1 of section 25 tov.-n
to the moial judgment of mankind ship 5, south, range M east in Choc
ti take notice that a government had j taw county. 140 a.'re.- rolling ti in
now at last been established which her land, 90 acres of which are till
Even a sturdy character who!
doesn't want an automobile so bad I
lie can taste it can smell it when it I
passes.—Ex.
a 1 a man is a man is be- {£
au • lie isn't half as glad to be cur- f !
ed of a fundamental error as to get j
relief for his corns.—Ex.
sloji<at we can
the am i t<
an( one amon
is n<! 'J.v 1 little
pel'a1 it,
arc ' ' '■
if •
th( "h 'ti ■
mc^ve it W( are
so ith it
su; O
Rev. Knickerbocker, who closed a
m<eiy successful series of meetings
wl the city a t Sunday night, is one
the 'he vary strongest pleaders for
t has ever, visited
rk here will be fruit-
Christian feeling
and will undoubtedly
T ' ' ter men and wo-
io attended the meet-
Ilis sermons were
human actions and
i£eo . a.- he was
appealed to
his strength
tianin
Hi
ult in m,
en of thos
vas to serve men, not masters? It
is secure in everything except th
atisfaction that its life is right, ad-
usted to the uttermost to the stand-
rds of righteousness and humanity
I he days of sacrifice and cleansing
re not closed. We have harder
hings to do than were done in the
heroic days of war. because harder
see clearly, requiring more vision,
more calm balance of judgment, a
lore candid searching of the very
prings of right.
Look around you upon the field of
ana
rnl
He
ople have
that
per p!
mentioned to
last week the im-
• room in Hugo, and
court house is the
it. A movement
ae merchants of the city in this
lion v. uld settle the matter, as
thought the board of couny com-
moners will be glad to make a
e for it. If you have thought
t of a re.-t ;i,om you at once realize
;* its iwgportance and objects. It would
•cost very little and would really be
•a bcon to th" people who visit
nlai
I
• able place fo
I
■ roon.
r the
it It
is any other suit
rest room just
have a rest
-O-
■dent Wilso
round
it
the
fo
(ietlysburg
Spc ■ h, July 4, 1913.
friends ind Fellow Citizens:—I
,eed not tell you what the battle of
Gettysburg meant. The-e gallant
men in blue and grey sit all about us
of them met here upon
in grim and deadly
pon these famous fields
their comrades died
In their presence it
lent to discourse upon
le went, how it ended
lied! But fifty years
-one by since then, and I crave
ivilege >f peaking to you for
minutes of what those fifty
[years have meant
\\ hat hav< they meant ? They
have meant peace and union and vig-
& • and the maturity and might of a
nation. How wholesome and
healing the peace has been- We
have found one another again as
brothers and comrades in arms, ene-
knies no longer, generous friends,
.latl r, oui battles long past, the
uuarrel forgdtteu—except that we
ishall not forget the splendid valor,
the manly devotion of the men then
arrayed against one another, now
grasping hands and smiling into
each other's eyes. How complete
the union has become and how dear
to all of us, how unquestioned, how
benign and majestic, as state after
state has been added to this our great
family of free men- How handsome
the vigor, the ma'turity, the might of
tin great nation we love with undi-
vided tears;how full of large and
'flfident promise that a life will be
rrought out that will crown its
rengt'n with gracious juBtice and
h a happy welfare that will
'h all alike with deep content-1
good ball Gettysburg? Picture the array, the
it conies to us fierce heats and agony of battle, col
ihe league, mm hurled against column, battery
at the proper >ellowing to battery! Valor! Yes!
hove it Jreater no man shall see in war;
it nov. stands, ind self sacrifice, and loss to the ut
crying for a -rmost; the high recklessness of ex-
now that we ,lted devotion which does not count
oing to make good he cost. We are made by thes-
ragic, epic things tovknow what it
•jsts to make a nation—the blood
md sacrifice of multitudes of un-
nown men lifted to a great stature
n the view of all generations by
nowing no limit to their manl
illingness to serve. In armies
hus marshaled from the ranks o! ;
Vee men you will see. as it were, a I
at ion embattled, the leaders and the j
'd, and may know, if you will, how
ttle except in form its action dif-
■r- in days of peace from its action
i days of war.
May we break camp now and be at
ase" Are the forces that fight
oi the nation dispersed, disbanded
•ne to their homes forgetful of thi
immon cause? Are our forces dis
rganized, without constituted lead-
i-. and the might of men conscious-
v united because we contend, not
' h armies, but with principalitie
id powers and wickedness in high
laces. Are we content to lie still?
loe- our union mean sympathy, our
>eace contentment, our vigor right
ction, our maturity self compre-
ension and a clear confidence in
hoosing what we shall do? Wai
.tted us for action, and action nevei
eases.
I have been chosen leader of the
ation, I cannot justify the choici
•y any qualities of my own, but s<
t has come about, and here I stand
A hom do I command ? The ghostly
lost* who fought upon these battle-
ields long agi are gone. These
aliant gentlemen stricken in year.-
hose fighting days are over, their
lory won.' What are the order
w them, and who rallies them? I
ave in my mind another host, whom
hese set free of civil strife in order
hat they might work out the days
>f peace and settled order the life
if u great nation. That hot is the
>eople themselves, the great and the
mall, without class or difference of
'ind or race or origin; and undivid
d in interest, if we have but the vi
sion to guide and direct them and
rder their lives aright in what we
1o. Our 'constitutions are their ar-
ticles of enlistment. The orders of
the day are the laws upon our stat-
ute books. What we strive for is
their freedom, their right to lift
themselves from day to day and be-
hold the things they have hoped for,
and to make way for the still better
'ays for those whom they love who
are to come after them. The re-
cruits are the little children crowd
ing in. The quartermaster's store-
are in the mines and forests andfield'
in the shops and factories. Everv
day something must be done to push
the campaign forward; and it must
be done by plan and with an eye to
some great destiny.
How shall we hold such thoughts
in our hearts and not be moved? I
would not have you live even today
wholly in the past, but would wish to
stand with you in the light that
streams upon us now out of that
great day gone by. Here is the na-
tion God has builded by our hands.
What shall we do with it? Who
stands ready to act again and always
in the spirit of this day of reunion
and hope and patriotic fervor? The
Dark
from
Probably the main difference be-
'voo'i the lover and the husband is
about the same as between burning
ki , and cold storage smacks.
F. M. ALLEE
Attorney at Law
ble, balance grazing land.
loam and sandy, 1 1-2 mil
Speer. Okla. Appraisement, ? )0.
Terms cash.
Title to be taken in its present
condition.
Ten per cent of the highest bid
must be deposited in the hands of the
field clerk on the day of the sale in
the form of a bank draft payable to
R. Kessel. cashier of the Union Ag-
ency, the remainder of the purchase
priie to he paid within ter la- s of ^"oms 27-28 Brader building
call therefor. practice in all courts
W ritten bids, accompanied by ten an<' Texas.
• ——
ei\'-'i by t, , field p>■
hour of -ale iven above, will be
ipened and considered at the time of
,ale, the same as it the bidder made
*uch offer orally. Such written
bids must be presented to the field
lerk or mailed to him at Hugo
Okla.
No bid for less than appraised val-
ue will be considered.
I he right is reserved to reject any
and all bids.
DANA H. KELSEY,
United States Indian Superintenda-it,
Muskogee, Okla., Union Agen. v.
June 20, 191.'!.
Ii. D. Wilbor, Pres.
W H. Jones, V. P.
W H. -Oarrough, V. P.
Rush Record, Cashier
A. J. Biaid, Asst. Cash
E. C. Jones, Asst Cash
The Feeiing of Security
The freedom from worry.
The knowledge thai you nre pre-
pared to take advantage of an
opportunity when presented, is
w orth any sacrifice in starting and
building your bank account.
We pay interest on time deposit)*.
THL PIONEER BANK OF HUGO
The Hank That Helped to Make Hugo Grow.
Reflect!
Resolve!
Will 1
Oklahoma
Mecca Cafe
on Broadway
BOB JONES, Proprietor
Regular Dinner, 25 cts
Short Orders
I he best place to eat
Your patronage solicited
and appreciated
Money at Low Rate of Interest
on Improved Farms.
I Do My Own Inspecting and
Write My Own Papers
ROLAND HUGHES
FARM LOANS
Office Plione 165
Collins Bldg.
HUGO, OKI.A
•57.722.2(10.00 Appropriated.
Accordding to a statement filed in
the state senate by J. Elm-r Thomas,
under a general resolution, there ha;
>een appropriated by the Fourttf lei?
i.stature a total of $7,722,000. in
addition, the legislature se t aside
70C,000 more from special funds.
1 he Third legislature" appropriate I
■7.842 4C.S,
Ecucation and the Farmer.
I he question is often aslsed. Dees
tchool training help the farmer fr,.'m
' brines® standpoint? A rc-cert
.J.T1 cultural irvey of several town-
n'ps of Hopkins county, X. V
M,W\ Gross,
Attorney-at-I.aw.
OFFICE - Over Oklahoma
State Bank.
$1.00
nade by
f Cornell
a^ricultu
ias reveal
tha
hijrh
rth as much
worth of 5
>llejfe educa-
te as much."
suit of clas-
inly fair
To quote fro;
file survey show
>chool education is w
o a farmer a.-, >6,001
'*r cent bonds. A
>n is worth nearly tv.
his was mostly the r
ical training. It jg
ujrjrest that a technical traininjr m
irriculture would be of much more
'radical value to the fanner. A
imilar investigation of the frradil-
ut the school of agriculture of
be University of Minnesota . howe I
•n average labor incojfru? of
'• Compare this with $622 for or-
!ir.ary high school and *337 fur or-
linary college graduate . a- shown
■>y the New York investigation, and
for the average di-irict school
graduate.
HUGO
Furniture Co.
EAST OUKP STREET.
I: M D K K I A K E R S A N I)
KMBALMERS.
DA Y PHONE 114 — NIGHT
PHONE 152.
C. D. HARDT
Photographer
WILL BUY A GOOD BEDSTEAD AT THE
T. E. VERNER FURNITURE COMPANY
Dewev St iust North of VWhh YWmntil,.
!;!fi fifi f!fi i-yffS Mfi fjfi { if; l ift ^ ; i^
ARTHUR J. WEIR S
INSURANCE tornado «
QUICK SERVICE ON FARM LOANS
Uj
Rooms I and 2, Collins Building, B way. HuL'o t
Phone 165 ' s
S'f W"? ifi I Hiv Wv Kt tfi i S , tfj-i Jfi-f 'I S I-*fi i-ifi
LO NG I V O B II I L
-HUGO-
l I N G
• aou patriotic iervor
We are debtors to those fif- day of our country.g llfe ^
but I
•State of Oklahoma
County of Choctaw, SS
In the County Court „f Choctaw
County.
Number 1002.
In the matter of the estate of Wil
liam Anthony, deceased.
N'OTICE TO CREDITORS TO PRE'
SENT CLAIMS.
Notice is hereby given, that let-
ter of administration on the estatu
'( William Anthony, deceased, w,.r,.
(.'ranted to the undersigned by the
County Court of the County of < ho.-
taw, Slate of Oklahoma, on the sth
day of April, A. D„ 1913,
All persons having claims againsr
said estate are required to exhibit
ame to the under igned at the office
of Spriggs & Uarrett, in Hugo, Ok-
lahoma, for allowance, within four
months after the date of this publi-
cation with the necessary vouchers,
or they will be f„rever precluded)
from any benefit of said estate or
■ aid claims may be filed in said coun
ty court.
I'ated this 7th day of June, A D
1913.
RACHEL KING
Administratrix, of \\ , „ Anthony,
deceased.
Bpriggg & Barrett, Auyg. j26U
\ p.sltiv, ^uaratee of satisfaction
witbeverj pbotograpli matte
M v work compares with anv and
inv charges are moderate
lo ill kiwi-, of picture work
WOMACK
Mercantile Co,
Largest General Store
in Ch oc t a w County
! arm Implements, Wagons and
Dry Goods. Groceries
1 IS-17-19 w. DUKR ST.
Baldwin Printing
Company
Fine Commercial Printing
«f all kinds.
PHONE 230
Corner iJnke «|i CrockeU Sis.
SEE THE
Haley-McCarthy Investment Co.
of Hugo for Farm Loans
Our plan of business is low rate of interct and quick service-no
delay in doling your loan. We malt, la,-He and small loans for
long or short "me. Office, room 7. Darn.ugh Bldft. \\V have
ST?" <52 busy.'8 M°°d' ChCaP 'aml W"" yutl
■
II
'15 • ]
Herald, June 2fith, 5 t.i
NOTICE OF SAI.K OF LANDS
UNDER EXECUTION.
Notice is hereby given, that in
pursuance of a writ of execution is-
sued out of the Clerk's office of the
Hugo Mate of Oklahoma; the prop
eitj levied upon beinji the undivid-
ed interests of said defendants in
and to aid propei ty, and have caus-
W ram<* tofb,? aPPr«ised accord-
ni i , i as folloW|i: Lot I „f
Block I, $28.00; Lot 2 of Hlock 1
District Court in and for Choctaw! S28 00* I rit*" V'V t
St?Ui "f ' > the-Lot'Vo Hlock' 1 mtlb 'l f2rU0;-
lHth day of June, l'M.i. in an action Rln. k o «oon/. i '-ot ,r. of
wherein J. C. Fuller and V Sa nn- r 0 "lock
Fuller were plaintiffs, and W 11 lot k S *28.00;
Johnson, I. j' Johnson, E K lohn- $4 0.1 I o! 11 Blo' k '■
son, Agn«s Johnson and Hoyt John- l ot l'> '..f Blj!i! a i..'.,"/ ?' *-H-00;
son, partners, doing business under Block$18 00 and l'ot ii <>f
r. u. 1 nanle Mty|e ,,f <i. W. 8, $13.00 :
of Block
T. E. VERNER
Furniture Co.
Anything you want
in Furniture
New Shipment every week
216-18-20 Dewey Phone 295-45
■-■•v mini name ana Hiyie of (■ u k {linn mi • oiock
Johnson, were defendants, command- mnit of ih, ft r f°tal "IT™***-
ing me to levy upon property In-- $65«00 Vow 'ther |eVU:l1 u'""' "f
longing to defendants V K ,I„hn- h/rlh! „i N°S' .,hori'fore, notice is
- = upoir
ST K|oh^, commands""^ w'd'wSt
4 ^ £bef,M« fftrh Tn£
W n e n "f •' C Fulle' u"d and interut of W K n . ,e
W. D. FuHer against W. H. Johnson. Johnson E F l,ihl„, I "T'a J
J. J. Johnson, E. E. Johnson Airnf « r(ku., '^snon and Apuc^
Johnson and Hoyt Johnson, partners emenU herein^ f° P. aml
doing business under the firm name Lu h h described or so
and style of G. YV. Johnson, for the 3«™entTnH T"' ,h" Kllu'
sum of $1)84.75 with $63.82 costs of July 'utf1 '""r "VX 2iHl1 ,la>'
Juw.^ lVmjr 'h,S 28rt (1 V of
Of the judgment, the Sth day of
March, 1912; I have levied upon
certain lands and tenements helone
ing to the said W. K. Johnson. I. J.
Johnson. E. L Johnson and Agnes
Johnson, not exempt from sale un-
der execution, for want of goods and
chattels of the said defendants, to-
wit: All of the right, title and in
terest of said last above named de
ut. R M.
Sheriff „f Choctaw
homa.
CONNELL.
County, Okla-
Considerin tie antasln cnuml,v
fendants'in Ixits 'L X V u.'i(T'VTn | Wil" widow* in perfect'beaUh' u
Block Numbered 1. Lots G, ti. 7 not '•urprisinir ti, n th .
H-*— «• BWk
•he old-fashioned glnnmist who de-
^ex wa* kill-
lacing—Ex.
« ... ijcitn iiuiiiorrt-U DIOCK
Numbered 7. Lots 41, 42, 4.1 and 44, "u , , .
of Block Numbered 8, all of the fashioned glooi
above described propertv being in! l lnPt'd tha' the female
Johnson'* addition to the City of iueiI with tight
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Curd, Jesse G. The Choctaw Herald. (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 10, 1913, newspaper, July 10, 1913; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc97701/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.