The Enid Daily Eagle. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 46, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 9, 1911 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program 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:
PAGE FOUR
TI I SD tV, MAY 0, 1011.
THE ENID DAILY EADLE
Published every evening, except
Saturday, and Sunday morning, by The
Eagle Printing and Publl h!ng Co
M. H. WRIGHT, Editor and llaaagrr.
Enid,
LARrr>
'0 (jV -
publlcanisin; it is a statement of the
cause of insurgency which will re-
duce both old parties to historical
topics, and which is the cause of the
conflict that is belnf: waged by the
people for their full and simple rights
contemplated under the constitution
of the nation.
n
Tliat In a narrow margin which di-
vides the life of the officer of the
law from the mob which breakh the
law.
. , , —Hugo.
Diaz says he won't be kicked out;
that's what yo|r Uncle Joe said, too,
about & year ago.
Madero seems to be occupied, in-
cidentally, in an effort to restrain
his braves from eating their ene-
mies up; there Is a suggestion of mob
spirit in that "fight," and the federal
councils will not fail to get it
great cause is not impatient for
mere scrap.
Not long ago an Alaskan coal party
lynched Gifford Pinchot in effigy;
but they had not heard from the su-
preme court at that time. It might
be well for those patriots to hang
the real cause of their troubles now
that they know. lie resigned also,
but for a different reason.
That Kansas City special sto|>8
longer In Enid than at any other
town tomorrow. There's a chance
to advertise the town which should
not t e neglected. There are two op
portunitles in that hour and one of
them is Rnid's, depending upon the
number and disposition of The men
who meet the train. Let's take the
K. C. bunch in with n better bunofc
and show them.
WIU4CKV8 MI'KKC IIBS.
The governor of New .Jersey is de-
livering a series of speeches that in
the course of human evnts are
bound to measure well with the
great political analyses and epochs of
American history. This is true be-
cause he is a master of the problems
that he is discussing; be understands
the times, and knows what it is that,
is really beneath this seeming confu-
sion, He !b not distracted by the
symptoms and does not prescribe.
Wilson has not agitated, nor under-
taken to stir up sentimeut. He Ib not
militant, nor self-conscious. There
seems to be no personal ambition In
the mind of the speaker when the
ex-president of a college and a writer
of history rises l<> address the mass,
es of his countrymen, ills mind
seems to be matured, and withal he
Is not uneasy for a moment. He is
voicing the half-formed and dimly
realized convictions of the people af-
ter more than a decade- three de-
cades—of unrest and dissatisfaction.
The people have been waiting for
the voice that is clear, and that re-
duces and dismisses the chaos of
doubt; they have waited for it as
they did for the voice of Lincoln
when Douglas and hundreds of mili-
tant abolitionists had been fanning
the instincts of the masses into a
raging flame that consumed but did
not clarify or purge. Lincoln calmly
announced the issue and discussed it
in the simple language and manner
of Its comparatively simple Import,
and he led the nation through its
struggle for a clear consciou^n* ss,
and understanding.
A CONVENTION HALL.
"Why should we not have Wood.!
row Wilson down here?" asked one j
business man of another yesterday,
and the answer was suggestive: "Be-
cause we have no place in which he
could speak to four or five thousand
people. Wilson cannot afford to
speak to a few hundred people." And
that's Just why Enid will not become
a mecca for the masses who desire
to meet until a convention hall or
building of that character has been
erected.
The building of a city here de-
pends, not upon a location near any
great resource, not is the city on the
banks of a great stream of trade that
dannot take another route; Knid
must be built to metropolitan size
by the processes of knitting and ty-
ing. People who live within a trade
radius must buy it here; folks who
have money to lnvi-st or deposit
must place It here; manufacturers
who wish to distribute goods must
reach a great territory from her.
and so people who must meet to-
gether and become obligated and at
tached to that place must come to
Enid, for conventions, state occa-
sions, inter-state and even larger
meetings.
"Where men meet together
there is power," and the middh
Western states have more than one
great center of trade and population
that has been made by early and
favorable consideration of that fact
No city is an accident; cities arc
made, built, conceived in the minds
of "boosters" and worked out bv
men who know that men in misses
act much like individuals; that th
avenues of trade are ^arly estab-
lished, as much through the feelings
as by the laws of economy, and often
more; and that trade routes will
build a city nt the point where they
meet. So Enid should have great
meetings, and people should come to
town for them by the tens of thou-
sands. In that way they would in-
evitably become the friends of the
city, and two or four hundred thou-
sand friends who are full of the mem
orles of any town will bring and send
their millions to It.
Not a farmer In many counties
near Garfield and far beyonf but that
should know the business places and
many of the business men of Enid
Every one of them should be a frien 1
of the city, because they have found
the city their friend. They will be-
friend some city, where the condi-
tions of human interest and profit
are best. Why not Enid? If they
were here often and mingled with
our men and women on occasions,
and took the':* chll 'ron to our great
rest rooms, their products to our
great market,—a convention hall
should be so built as to permit a
market on at least a part of the first
or basemeut floor—if they could
know the city's men and become thHr
guests,-—That's why Kansas City
fiends out tf ade trains, and Oklaho-
ma City had people from all over the
state to see Ben Hur last winter.
And that's why the latter city an-
nounces the next quadrennial meet-
ing of the Methodist chin h, a path.
ATTEND THE
BIG PROSPERITY SALE
COMMENCING WEDNESDAY
AT
NORTH SIDE S QVAftf, ENID, OK LA
PKOSAH
(Prom the Kuni
Bancbn.il esribes ur
K-'Hh and jinklt*8 al
bi iiffleH. When II
goe , they return I
DEFEAT
h City Journal)
now in clover ever
t; cook up mudri
about basehitM am
game ugulriHt m
common prose.
THE LAST DEGREE
■>'he .studied hard in college
To gain her M. A.; then
3he hooii applied her knowledge
To win her M. A. N.
BY MARQUIS JAMES
cither When aviation gets
common how are they going to keep
folks from seeing bail games for'
(nothing? Judging from the
kind of ball the Western association ■
is playing, there are some people in 1
Enid who are optomistlc enough to
say that they are glad that Enid is
out of the league. We believe as
Bill Kimmell does, that this state-
ment contains more optoiuism than
truth, however When some
people have a large diamond ring
man's wif^ J on they can't keep from waving their
generally thinks I hand around a lot.... Frugal house
that he has bet- wives are probably saving breakfast
ter success as a^ food boxes td start the fire with next
flirt than he. winter „A man said today that
really does Jake Roach wfes the fastest man on
...Half of the his feet In town About the
wise
which
erally
as true don't
amount to
much
time for some
...SPORTING NEWS...
Si.\\l)l.\(i OF TEAMS.
13
Nat
Clubs:
Philadelphia
Pittsburg . .
New York ........ 12
Chicago 11
Cincinnati 7
Boston 8
St Louis 5
Brooklyrt
League.
Won Lost I
. 16
15
70:!
6S4
a?,,:
6 GO
4 fi7
250
250
American League
Won Lost Pet,
,.f. 20 2 900
Clubs
Detroit ,., . 20
Boston 12
Philadelphia 9
■ New York . 9
sayings hardest thing Enid policemen have ....
Chicago 9
•e gen- to do yet is to swing their clubs and Washington 8
eepted try to look unconcerned Will C!eyelantl 8
Penniman says that Tom Jewell's
dog, besides being worth the candy
he buys for It has taken all of the
degrees in Masonry from Entered
Apprentice to Knight Templar, East-
9
10
10
St. Louis
COO
50.)
474
471
4 1 f
30 1
2 38
American Association.
It is about
reporter to write a long story ofiern Star inclusive, in spite of the
Enid's Chanches to get a union 0'* repeated black ball of Dad Gilt-:
depot in the near future. Every re-iner* tyler, and he thinks she j^angag
I knows the pass words, too To
porter who has- been around mu?h
Is an artist at writing this yarn,
because It is used in every news-
paper In every town of any size
in t lie country nt least once a
year If there is anything in
a name it is no wonder that
Launcelot Lingenfelter of Okla-
homa City got appointed page in
the lower house at Washington
Pretty girls get so many
oiupllments that one would natur-
ally think that It would be hard1'
for any one to say something nice
shout them which they would like.
hut it is'nt An Enid girl is
considered neat because she never
permits her shoes to get worn out
on the heel Wo have lots of
faith in the women who stay to wash
the dishes after a church dinner
...Piano players are going 10
make a lot of people lazy A
lady gut off a south bound Rock
Island train the other day and
asked "Deck," the hack driver,
to take her to a fortune tellers.
?ek" replied that he didn't know
any palmists in town but he
would drive around and see. This
he did but he found no clairvoyant.
The lady seemed much surprised a*,
this and ventured that It was not
y creditable to Enid to let the
Clubs:
Minneapolis
Milwaukee .
Columbus .
Won
18
13
10
Ui
11
11
8
Lost Pet
9 607
r.&r.
626
r~LM
At Wichita—W^tchita 5, Lincoln
At Denver
At St. Joe
Denver 6, Topeka 5.
Omaha 1, St. Joe 3.
o
i .WS LKAGl'E.
Oklahoma City 3, Austin 2.
Ft. Worth 6, Houston 5.
San Antonio 6, Dallas 4.
Waco 4, Galveston 2.
\\ I ST I ] It \ A SHI >CI AT ION.
Coffeyville Sapulpa .1.
Coffeyville, Kan., May 9.—By
making five hits, one for three base.^
Sapulpa tied the score in the eighth
inning, but the locals won out in
the ninth.
Score by innings: R. H. E.
Sapulpa .... 000 000 030—3 7 2
Coffeyville .. 020 010 44 1—4 9 1
Batteries: Hicks and Hester;
Thrailkiil and Bradbury.
Tulsa 14, Independence i).
Independence, May 9.—Demorali-
zation which started when Harlow,
for independence, was ordered from
10 521 the game for disputing a decision,
Indianapolis 7 16
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
30 I
St. Paul
most merchants the cash customer , llulwlllo ,, |( r,|M
I is the personification of beatific love-i\*iodo
liness Perhaps the prize of-
fered by the federated women's clubs
for the best kept vacant lot will heTp j
sell some of the backward ones.
..Needing a two cent stamp on Philadelphia 5, Brooklyn O. !
Sunday, an Enid man says he inquir-l Philadelphia, May 9.—Alexande
ed at two hotels, three news stands ' the, visitors to three hits and j Joplin 10, Springfield li.
and a pool hall. They were all out. fa,,lled nine basemen. 1 Joplin, Ma.,,May 9.—A home run
One of the clerks who sai<i he had no' S(°re; by innings: R. H. E. by Anderson was the feature of a
stamps was writing a letter. Our ' ro()klyn . . 000 000 000—0 3 1 ( one-sided game.
informer wonders where he expect-• Philadelphia 300 002*00*—5 12 1
ed to secure the postage. ! Batteries: Bell and Bergen; Al-
exander and Dooin.
It Startled the World
Pittsburg 4, St. Louis 2.
Pittsburg. May 9.—Pittsburg do-
when the astounding claims were
first made for Bucklen's Arnica
ering to which every one who is| r®P°rt get out that, the city couldn't
awake in the United States will have
Here is one of the paragraphs from 1 his attention directed repeatedly.
Wilson's Kansas City speech that II- That one convention will l>e worth
lustrates him, and makes the issue
clear:
"What we are witnessing now is
*not so much a conflict of parties as
a conflict of Ideals, a struggle be-
tween those who, because they do not
understand what is happening, blind-
Jly hold on to what is, und those who.
because they do not see the real ques-
tions of the present and the future
jln a dear, revealing light, know that
there must be sober change; know
that progress, none the less active
and determined because it is sober
and Just, Is necessary for the main-
tenance of our institutions, and the
^rectification of our life."
This is neither democracy nor re-
the price of the hall to Oklahoma.
Why not a convention hall In Enid?
It would be comparatively easy to
build It. It would In turn become
a corner stone.
It eeders* Futurity.
Lexington. Ky., May 1 . The rich-
est stake of the year in Kentucky
will be decided this afternoon as
the feature of the ninth day of the
lexington meet. It Is the Breeders'
futurity, value $7,000, for two.year-
olds at half a mile The $3,500 Blue
Grass stakes for three-year-olds,
which is In the nature of a prelimi-
nary to Saturday's Kentucky derby
at I<ouisville, will be run tomorrow.
T7 • 71 /T Ayer's Hair Vigor is for men, too.
ror lvlen "'s a splendid hair-dressing. It
* is refreshing, cooling; and it keeps
the scalp clean and healthy. It never changes the color
of the hair, not in the least. Ask your doctor. * f "■•
4 FEMr GOOD RESOLUTIONS:
To never borrow nor lend—especially lend.
To live within my income, because i'can't live without my
nome.
To neither drink, gamble, cuss, nor swear as lonjj as every-
th 'PK goes the way I want it to
To love my mother-in-law, even If it hurts me.
To laugh every time I i?et a chance
To go to church on Sunday—if I go at all.
To never smoke more than one cigar at a time.
To live up to my reputation and never on it.
To spend all my leisnre hours at
T HE SALT V DOG
support at least one fortune teller.
She said that she had come all the
way from lola, Kansas to have her
fortune told. She asked to be
driven to a rooming house, where
she spent the afternoon and left on
the evening train, saying she was
going to Oklahoma City where she
knew she could get her flortuno
ti Id What has become of those
crude oil burners which were so
much talked of a year ago....Now
when it rains the frogs sing. What
sound is the more welcome to t.he
heart than the shrill, clarion note of
this nocturnal, aquatic, web-footed
troubador. The meadow lark for
the fields and the robin for the back
yard but the energetic whole sou led
crescendo, for care dispelling, debt-
forgot ting enjoyment give us the
frog, of the mud pond. May Justin
I-. Harris write something musical
I about him You can't tell
Enid man that money don't talk,
for he married a rich wife. . . .
, Sherlock Holmes has been elected to
I membership of the "Cancumback"
I club. Speaking with a bookseller
yesterday we were informed that the
•'all for Doyles works in which is ex-
ploited the doings of the famous
character of fiction has been on the
increase for the past two months. .
....We have never been exponents
of the musical value of a woman's
whistling Contributed: The
man who eats mustard, lamhsquarter
and greens ought to be dehorned
like other cows and tied with a rope
| to browse in some weed patch. .We
havn't any Life Motto which me
follow through thick and thin, and
'< othM pftnn,1 - k«vA
Salve, but forty years of wonderful " atcd St. Louis by bunching four
cures have proved them true, and ' '*s in the third and getting big
everywhere it is now known as the 'n *he fourth and sixth.
best salve on earth for burns, boils,' Score by innings: R. IT. E.
scalds, sores, cuts, bruises, sprains,' Pittsburg ... 002 101 00*—4 9 1
swelling eczema, chapped hands, fev. ^ Louis ... 200 000 000—2 7 3
er sores and plies. Only 25c. I Batteries: Steele and Gibson;
At all drug stores.
icd' havoc 'n t!ie playing,
ore by-'innings: R. If. F.
Tulsa 120 011 000—14 It) 4
Independence 502 0(|0 000— 9 9 f
Bateries: Rice, Bridges, llotehkis^
and Garvy; Chestei1, Krafft, Fulwld-
er and Harlow. Allingham:'
Score by innings: R. H. E.
Springfield . 202 000 000— 2 G 1
Joplin .... 114 010 21*—10 12 2
Batteries: Sewell, Hill and Gold-
vaithe; Fiebert and Keller.
Snodgrass Traveling.
A note from Harry Snodgrass
formerly of this city and now oper-
ating in El Reno in the relay office,
announces that he is traveling
throughout the eastern states and
ir, Canada. He was In Toronto at
the time and was expecting to take
in all of the Lawrence region, the
great lake cities and resorts, and
then to make NeW York tehd many
other places between. He will re-
turn by way of Chicago and the
!Mississippi valley.
THE REAL ESTATE BOTH.
Special Meeting Called For Tonight
By Committee.
A special meeting of the real
estate exchange has been called
foi tonight in the chamber of com-
merce rooms by the officers of the
organization. Business of import
ance is the cause assigned, and the
members are urgently requested to
be present. "Every man In the
city who is dealing in real estate is
included in this invitation," said
the president; a few have not join-
ed and we want every man in the
frity^ who sells real estate to be-
come a member of wr organization
at once.
Illinois-.Missouri league.
) Peoria, 111., May ^,-^-Wlth Lini
{cln in Taylorville, Pekln in CaiJj
ton, and the Chanipaigh-frrbana team
In Clinton, the '1911 season of th^
Illinois and Missouri league opens
xIiis afternoon and will continue trt
September 10.
.MOTHERS' DAY.
(■ihbs Gets Divorce.
In the supreme court E. F. Glbbg
secured1 a d«-roe of divorce froi
Dora E. Glbbs.
duty was alleged in the petition.
The husband ?,rets the custody of
the three children and the prop-
erty. They /ad been married
about 18 years.
Boston New York 4.
Boston, May 9.—Boston over-
ame New York's lead in the eighth
Gross negleot ~o(1i"n,ng and won'
Score by innings: R. II. E.
Boston 000 300 02*—5 8 2
New York . . 400 000 000—4 9 0
Batteries: Pfeffer and Raviden:
Raymond and Wilson.
AMERICAN LI
ua'E.
on f, New York O.
Detroit H, Chicago 12.
Chicago, May 9.—Detroit batted
hard and won, .loner?, the Detroit
left fielder, was carried from the
field uncons ious after being hit by
Every woman's heart responds.to ,M"
the charm ami sweetness of a baby's s' orP 1:y lnn'n3s: I! " «■
voice, because nature intended her ' lli<r'" m,° 001 on| —" c 1
for motherhood. But even the "Plroit •••■ 000 131 201^s ln 1
loving nature of a mother shrinks Batteries: I.anse, llaker and Sul-
from the ordeal because such a time llvan: ('m,|,|f'ton nnd Rtmage.
is regarded as a period of suffering
and danger. Women who use
Mother's Friend are saved much Now Vork Mny R',ln ln,"r-
discomfort and suffering, and their ru:)tp(1 ,,,e Bame ,">,w'ipn BoBton
systems, being thoroughly prepared !,nd N"w York Americans, while the
by this great remedy, are in a l lm: was progress tho
healthy condition to meet the time then helm; in the lead 4 to
with the least' possible suffering "
and danger. Mother's Friend is Score by innings: R. n. V3
recommended only for the relief Hoston ooi oiro—4 c i'
and comfort of expectant mother ; ^>'\v York ooo ooo o I i
it is in no sense a remedy for vari- Batteries: Wood ami Nnnaniaker;
ous ills, but its many years of Buc-|c hlwell and liiair.
cess, and the thousands of endorse-
menU received from women who St. Louis i, cleveland
have Used it are a guarantee of the! St. l.nnls. May 0. The local team
benefit to be derived from its use, ibroke its losing streak, defeating
This remedy does not accomplish Cleveland.
wonders but simply assists nature j Scor. hv Innings: R. H. i'
to perfect its work. Mother's cleveland .. ooo too on—2 0 0
Friend allays nausea, prevents cak-, si. i,ouis ... ooo o::o o i •—4 8 1
tng of the _ _ ^ Batteries Krapp and Smith; I.ake
nreasU, ami in and Stephens.
every way con- ^
tributes to AMi'iucw association'
strong, healthy 1 ,C1 ,U At St. Paul St. Haul 7. Minn. a,,
motherhood. Mother's Friend is °"8 3-
sold nt drug stores. Write for our |
free book for <acpectant mothers, i \\e.v<ern league.
BRADF1EL1) REGULATOR CO,]
and Churclfes Will Observe
it Next Sunday.
"Mothers' "Day," which is observed
the country over on the second Sun-
day of iMay, will be recognized by
ninny churches and other societies
in this city next Sunday. On that
day jiastors of many of the different
Churches of the city will preach ser-
mons in honor of "Mother."
The white carnation will be worn
by Enid citizens on that day as a
visible tribute to the American
Mother. People generally of the
whole community regardless of
( reed or belief will observe Mothers'
l>ay on this occasion.
Blue lirttss League.
Lexington, Ky., May 9.—What
promises to be a banner season for
baseball in this section commences
today with the inaugural of '.lie
Blue Grass League schedule. Tlio
< ircuit Includes Lexington, Rlch-
r.iond, Paris, Frankfort, Maysville
and Winchester. Maysville claims
to have the biggest baseball teem
in the country, nearly all of the
players being six-footers.
"Ilat" fo Fight Again.
Chicago, May 9.—Battling Nelson
former lightweight champion and
Eddie Santry will meet In a s'x
round contest before 1 a Fond du
Lac, Wis., club tonight. Nelson is
confident that he can come back
and expects to take on JVolgast
again if he demonstrates his ability
with some of the smaller caliber
s( rappers.
(Continued on Page Five)
I
N THE belief that a banking institution should be
prepared to do more than receive and disburse
monies for its patrous, this bank lias been for some
time past perfecting its system of correspondents and
tenders to its depositors the use of these facilities iti
carrying out important deals, closing and delivering
contracts, making collections, and in the handling of
matters of consequence in any part of the world.
The First National Bank
Enid - - - Oklahoma
At Sioux City—Sioux City ti,
Oklahoma Laundry Company
BEST EQUIPPED LAUNDRY
IN NORTHERN OKLAHOMA
We Use Kenneeott Soft Water System
PHONE 108 . ENID, OKLA
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.
Wright, M. H. The Enid Daily Eagle. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 46, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 9, 1911, newspaper, May 9, 1911; Enid, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth350091/m1/4/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.