The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 299, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 11, 1909 Page: 4 of 10
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THE FORT WORTH RECORD: WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 11, 1909.
♦
T
DAIRY COWS SUFFER
TRIBUTE BUREAU
ASSIMILATING THE FOREIGNER.
Dhe Worwing Ch-Chat
3
He to alien to our institutions
FOR CRAZY SNAKES
FROM TUBERCULOSIS
J. Bandegard,
BOARD OF HEALTH BUSY PROMINENT CITIZENS
I
Money Paid to Cray Snake in Pere
(
In an academy near where I live, the girl who won the valedictory
V
T
li
is on display a
lung taken from a
5e
I
dies, for drudgory is his habit;, he
agement.
u
I
’• pervertd senses or a sin in his eight
LOCAL SOCIAL NOTES.
1
i
week for a visit to Gainesville.
y) .
hursay to attend Bar-
G
INAUGURATION FLAG.
was dischargea before she was cured.
inaugurated, will again be raised Aug.
us
HOROSCOPE DOR THE DAY.
Wednesday, Aug. 11.
JC damperig VVth Orikes 3
FIRS’T BALE OF BROOM CORN.
Marketed at Elk City, Okla., for *70 4
J. M. LEWIS IN HOUSTON POST.
On this 223d day two powerful and
(
EDUCATOR FOR EXEOUTIVE.
J
tonight
I
At a candidate for
esidegt of
at its very 1nc
eption.
students of the
of
ivei
the former
de-
viate uni
rsity feel that a great in-
)
1
\
Proa
This day is excellent for hiring men
Senator Bailey blamable for voting to i"and seems to have no other purpose
whose
prejudice against
Can
that fit.
I
gloomily where
must pay th.
ity is
that he was hand-in-hand with the
UN
Trenton, N. J., Aug. 1*.—Edward R.
has disco ve red in
town the lari
»... --------
—--c
and if he participates in our political
affairs he will be a positive hindrance.
But there is only one generation of
Ca
hn
united their
themaside.
As the Banner sensibly says, it to
the nature of the proposition that to
important.
Benedictires-thls morning.
Miss Jessie Criss will
si
h
le
cuulum.n
।
»
I
nel, lavender, dill, parsnips, elecam-
pane, forn, myrtle, lily of the valley,
marjoram and mulberry.
ti
th
: •
Fo
ot
11.
duction of oil and that it will build net
pipe lines.
+ I
Li
Taft to holding down that seat on
* his veranda at Beverly, but just wait
until the tariff tack works its way
through the cushion.
not to pass by unnoticed.
Children are born today under signs
A
■ I
Her Reason.
“Sha to trying to get on the right
side of young Skads."
“She knows tht a man’s right arm
is stronger than his left.
in the union.
It’s a pity that all of them can’t
win, for each one deserves to win.
rest
The
i 13
101
dir
1
va
los
to bring it in duty free?
Does the News believe that the steel
trust, while still enjoying tariff Tatea
was pre
almost
Many
-
jery
M
12
5
fteriing of thia city
the outskirts of the
Sutton.
The Sutton case
books clear to me;
Sutton was feel!pg
Blue, so he
Got half a dozen
Cadets to
Meet him and- punch
Him black and blue,
Knock him unconscious
in the dirt
So that the bullet
Would not hurt.
Then while they held
Him foot and hand—
And he was senseless,
• Understand—
He drew his pistol
Without dread
And shot himself
Plumb through the head.
It certainly .
Was much to ask
Of them. and was
A sorry task
For them to do;
But friends in need.
You’ll recollect.
Are frienda indeed.
_ "Voting With Aldrich.**
Houston Post
The Nashville Banner exposes the
domestic service.
Traveling to under good auspices.
Those with this birth Onte are un-
der signs that often give an undue
tendency to pleasure and indulgence.
They wih do well to use their will
t
bJ
a I
•
ii I
be
« a
col
Two mighty stars in rare conjunction
stand
And promise happiness o’er all the
land.
r
I
assigned htm."
Here In Texas, a number of news-
*8
The two hearts beat; the world’s
all right!
If there were floods for our plunging
through
To reach each other, We’d swim
Milk Provided Larger Cities Iu Okla-
homa. However, Has Shown
Improvement.
P
/
(
And the men stay i
they are,
For ever the men
freight.
If behemoth and if dinosaur
Blocked the straight way to the
ones we love.
We’d give the behemoth thing “what
for.”
"We‘d hand the dinosaur thing a
shove; a
For love is fresh as it used to be
in the days of the prehistoric mian.
If wives do summer beside the sea
While husbands juggle the' frying
pan.
Just the Same.
The babes and their mother are gone
away.
The babes and their mother are out
and far.
Where moonlight ripples across a bay,
Where wind-blown grasses and tall
trees are,
Where children play in the fields and
• run
With hats 'held out after butter-
flles.
And Where when day and their play
is done
The whippoorwill sings their lul-
labyes.
Famous Pennnnt Will Float From Mast
in Cherokee Nation.
*
But always there is the good cigar,
And other "widowers" to sit late
in a frlendly talk, ora friendly game.
With laugh and jest till the night
grows ripe. -
And cigars are good if the tales are
tame.
And there’s peace untold in a light
ed pipa.
And I would be Where they are, but I
Have other things to attend to here
Where buildings tower against the
sky.
n life to battle, and all the year;
Fd love to hark to the whippoorwill.
I’d love to dream where the cattle
'browse,
Or stand bareheaded upon the hill.
Or wait at night for the homing
cow».
of 1
G. 1
apr
and
wal
tra
size
dre
be
tit!
but
nJ
ritc
12
ro
11 H
Miss Lela I
New York Hi
1 ..
tail
< I
bo
’ f
in J
tld
on
nol
w t
lay
1
son to Use Without Qucstlon •
From His Followers.
1
1
l<<n I
i lal
fix I
Hrr!
to 1
I
liol
num
the I
Tl
to; I
Ti
1 I
i . < .1
« los
l.n lel
l ... r
the I
E°0
colle
usus
som
©per
as i
new
midi
offi
timie
the
the
it la
will
shou
ship
be a
unlo
ware
lies
are
The demand for tincoln pen pies
demonstrates that Americans no long-
er despise the day of small things.
KILLED BY LIGHTNING.
lad kilea by Bolt in Front of Mother’
Eyes.
Benver, Oki*.. Aug. 10?— (Specin)-
Th. s-year-ota son of J. B. *! Wright
was .truck down by a boH of lightning
.s.
names and votes are mentioned. The
Democratic senator who would cast
his votes so as always to oppose the
venatOr from Rhode Island without
COUNTI SKAT CONDITION.
Peculiar Situntion Exists Relative to
Administratlon of Couuty Offices.
Muskogee, Okla., Aug. 19.— (Special.)
A peculiar condition exists in MeIntosh
county relative to the ad rain tot rat ton i
of the county offices. There have been
two county seat eieotions and the coun-
other guiding principle would give
evidence of a stupidity and prejudice
- that would totally disqualify him for
Benets ry. ■
Kutred at the postofrnce at Fort Worts ae
second Haas isaU matter. ____________
* rEnMS OF SUBSORIPTION.
DAILY. . M
THE FORT WORTH RECORD
AND RRGISrEE
Mk city, Okla., Aug. 10. —(Speclal.y
i-
That man MacVeagh is either very
brave or very foolish. Wonder what’s
the name of his successor?
require the stee] trust to pay 25 cents '
per ton duty on its Imports of Cuban '
or*. instead of voting to permit it.
Indlanian Comes Into *100,000 Estate
Through Twenty- Year-Old Pieture.
Muskogee, Okla., Aus.10.— (Special. }
By means of a photograph twenty
years old it appears that the identity
of the only heir to Z. K. Fulkerson,
who died here, a short time ago and
left an estate estimated to be worth
that
for t
V •
t
f*
An
will
n .
table
herb?
on its finished product* which en
cha
so
- bos
. -seh
nar
the
dar
lari
. tio
tha
DAHV AND SENIWREKLT.
BY THE RECORD COMPANT.
otees Cormer rim and Euak Stregt.
"pectars: clarence ...J.Sandegara,
3 w spencer. N Hardiac. William G. Newb
and W. J. Funkhouwer, Fort Worth. R •
will never enjoy the* fruits of his
thrift, for spending to a pain to his
Mrs. McCullum will entertain the
than an attempt to create an unjust for any work, but especially so forFe goes to mountains e r meo nit hays
lb a dream at a 1 st and In gowns
greatest section of the grandest state : and not with respect to the personal-
ity of the senator who proposes it.
Eufaula, which is t.- —-----—----
seat. Checotah is in the northern part
of the county and Fufaula Is In ths
sonthern part, both towns being abor
the same size. Most of the county off.
COUNTY OFFICIAIS SFCUREIIST
OF CONTHIBUTORS TO IX-
DIAN DISTUREANCE FUND.
article, in estimating the value of
these reductions, the News says: “So
prohibitive were they already. rates
can be reduced without increasing tne
ability of the importer to compete j
with the home manufacturer, so that
. his power of extortion to not Im-
paired.**
ty seat contest is now before tne su-
preme court on an appeal by Checotah,
which town lost out in a contest with
the high place to which his state had they will have 3 great opportunity
which must find them reay if it is
the men
their annual picnic at Tucker Springs
and this year the chief attraction to
them will be the White House flag,
which the President has sent to them,
though they 2 will have their regular
semi-religfous ceremonies, followed by
dancigandfeasting.
Dallas News vehemently
strength and brushed
cere live tn or nearChecotah and were
sympathzers with that town in the
bitter fights that led to much blood-
shed in the county.
* AILLION-DOLLAR OIL COMPANY.
Federal Oil & Gas Cempany Granted me
-------------. charter. ---- ■ •----
Guthrie, Okla , Aug. 10.—(Special.)—4
The Federal Oil A Gas company, a
$1,000,000 corporation chartered under
he laws of Delaware and organized
in that state Jan, 18. 1909, was granted
authority to do business ‘in Oklahoma
today by the secretary of state grid ap..
Jointed as resident agent, G. A. Erixon
of Guthrie.
salubrious climate, the best present
and future railroad facilities, and
the term was ended, and were unable to deliver their commencement
partH. *
Isn’t that a tremendous object lesson?
The president of Mt. Holyoke coliege say* that many girls come to
her saying: "We don't understand how it is, but we can’t sit up nights
sow condemned by Inspector
Emery, and killed a few days
specimen of polrorus on record;
mushroom welghs,43 pounce to
inehes in height and measures
inches in cicumference. ___
heir is Isaac O. Fulkerson and his home
is at Washington, Ind..
Twenty years ago Z. K. Fulkerson
had his picture taken at Odom, Ind. In
some way this photograph came into
the possession of a- Muskogee man. II
was Identified immediately by Fulker-
able it to extort an unfair price,
would have reduced the price of the
plows, hoes and hardware of Senator
Bailey s constituents if it had been
permitted to bring its ore from Cuba
or duty?
These constituents may tret the
moundnens of the Newe‘ argument by
observing the price cf these thinga, an
the tarir, on iron ore has been re-
duced from 40 cents a ton to IS cent.
. 4 Eon.
■ governor. Dr. Boyd
Oklahoma university
nounces him for voting “to retain a
high duty on iron ore frpm which
his constituents’ plows, hoes and hard-
ware are made.” In another column
of the same issue, in the course of
a discussion of the tariff bill gener-
ally. it enumerates among the Presi-
dent’s achievements "a paring of the
duties on steel and iron, leaving them
yet above the admitted level of pro-
POSITIVE PROOF THAT MILK
OUTPUT IS BEING SOLD
TO PUBLIC.
protectionists, and yet even the Col- to learn how to use it
fall.
Mr. Lovelady, who has been the |
guest of his daughter, Miss lovelady,
left for his ranch near Colorado, Texas,
last night.
Miss Salite Estes arrived horns Sat-
urday morning from an extended trip
tn different points of Interest in Penn-
sylvania.
Mrs. Jessie T. Osborne and children,
who bad been the guests of Mrs. A. A.
Thompson of Corpus Christi, have re-
tunned home.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mullaly have gone
to Manitou and Colorado Springs,
where they will remain for the rest
of interest in Michigan and will • not
return home for several weeks.
Mrs. W. M. Medcalf and little daugh-
ter and Mrs. A. IC. Unn left Monday
fora month’s visit in Missouri.
Messrs. J. T. Henderson and Walling
of Dallas eame over Tuesday to at-
tend the McKee-Andrews wedding.
Mr. Hrshen Baker of. Palestine was
one of the out-of-town guests at the
McKee-Andrews wedding last night.
Mrs. S, B. Grey of Taylor was the
guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. ML Durrett
this week while an route to Colorado.
________ -A-laccine +Wn Fdclon "uMe*- e- wHU4• 4 ‘Er -0 151 Wn• won Une valegictory
composite the coal kI r. u and the girl who won the salutatory last spring both broke down before
the bravest, moat venturesome and - - -
Bia his children will be different. For
all their present slavery they will ob-
serve American ways and absorb
something of the American spirit in
some measure they will "live while
they live," and possibly their children
will fall^completely into the habits
of American extravagance.
And that is the way we assimilate
the foreigner. As a social and civil
unit, this Dane to useless if not dan-
tuberculosis should be condemned, and
the necessary precautions taken to
protect the public from the sale ol
milk from cows with tuherculosi.
From reports received by the state
board of health it is evident that the
milk supplies in the largr cities have
been vastly improved since . state in-
spection was inaugurated, but there to
still room for much improvement,
PHOTO LOCATE* HEIR.
Turkigh jingoes are yelling their
heads off for war with Greece. AH
of which proves that the jingo thrives
___all over the map.
The Rural New Yorker, a high-gerous.
class agricultural publication, to sreat. .
ly concerned about the desertion of
driver.”
No, such a life is not worth the liv-
ing. with all the prosperity it repre-
sents, but there is a lesson to ’he
American farmer in the economies
and the perseverance which the for-
eigner practices. Nature to so boun-
tiful in this country that compara-
tively few men to the manor born ap-
preciate the importance and the ul-
timate ease of a few years of saving.
This foreigner will drudge until he
son's friends. From this clew it was
soon found that Fulkerson hat trans-
ferred his membership from the Odd
Fellow lodge at Odom, Ind., to Iittle
Rock. Ark. As soon as this definite
identity of the dead man was estab-
lishedIsaac ulkerson, who,also.for-
merly lived at Odom but later moved
to Washington, was easily enabled to
establish his relationsaip to the de-
ceased. It appears that no is tne only
living heir and that he to entitled to
the entire estate, as no win was made
by the deceased, or if one was made it
has never been discovered.
him on any measure whatever. As a
matter of fact, party lines are not
drawn in most of the senate deliber-
1 ations. Senator Aldrich has frequent-
ly voted with the Democratic sena-
( tors. Almost syery important bill di-
_ rectly affecting Texas or—Texas peo-
"DAive your daughters out of doors." That's my advice to all mothers
of young girls in high school.
I think the way in which many girl* study and grind and toll over
their lessons in high school is absolutely absurd. It is not so bad in col-
lege. for the period of-mapid growth and development is practically past
when a girl enters college. ‘
But for a mother to allow a little high school girl to spend her after-
noons and maybe a large part of her evenings bending over her books,
is little short of crime.
Perhaps your daughter want? to bring home a fine report card. Then
tell her that if she can do It without undue efort you will be glad, but
that if sho cannot youprefer rosy checks to "A‘s," and bright eyes to
honors, .
Of course there are plenty of ambitonless girls who—do not in the
least need to be restrained, and some brilliant girls who can win the hon-
ors without paying (too highly for them; but I am not speaking of such
cases.
Bu monthe (by mall.........
Three tontha (by mail).......
SEMI -WEEKLI.
Twelve mouths ...............
81 inontha ...................
Mr. end Mrs. Rowland D. Williams
left Monday morning for Seattle and
leave- next Portland and will not return home until
Iler publication shows that Senator
Bailey voted with Senetr Aldrich but -,2
ous sections where Crazy Snake is sup.
posed to make his appearance now and*
then, and that it is the purpose of
thes men to shoot the old Indian on
sight. As well as any one of the half
dozen or so whom they believe to L>«
directly responsible for the death of
sheriff Odom and others.
Outside of a certain section com.
posed of McIntosh. Muskogee, Okmul-
gee and Okuskee eeunties, theiast—
nake uprising to regarded generally in
the light of a joke, but within a 11m-
ited region in which the Snakes are lo.
cated, the white people are in deadly
earnest in their desire to wipe out per-
manently the Saake spirit it is not
exactly that they are afraid the In-
dians will start an organized revolt,
they are too well informed of real con-
ditions for that, but there is ever pres-
ent a sort of unspoken dread that mur.
lu der may ba,committed at any time, and
It ■ so long as that condition exists most
every white man will continue to. keep
his guns where he can get them in 9
moment’s notice.
and instantly kiled before the eyes
of his mother st their home here during
a recent electrical storm. Mi*. Wright,
noticing a - storm approaching. Sent
her boy to the barn to remove the
cushions from a buggy. The child hesi-
tatert, fearis the eforin. but the moth- | ... .
er chided him geniiy, and sent him on ! Scott,
to the stable II* had made about hair’
of th distance, when a bolt of light- >
President Taft deciares he made a
mess of it hauling the main sheet on
a yacht. Wonder if it was of the
nine-fool variety?
fortunate planets combihe in an un-
common configuration to promise
luck and happy issue to mankind.
Venus in conjunction with Jupiter
indicates a period of triumphant re-
sults for projects commercial of so-
cial, and particularly so for those un-
justice was done to Dr. Boyd when he
was removed from the preaidency of
the university by the present state
administration, and feel that his serv-
ices in building up the uriversfty
should have substantial recognition
from the people of the state.
. PHYSICIAN ARRESTED.
The governor of Missouri has of-
. ferea are ward for kidnaper*. That's
probably what the kidnapers were
after.
55 •m 2.......ax n
nin: moatha n>f mnall, u p«u la MKo
M, MSerai ’« aaM i adignde 2 400
Feive wit. ay mad, U pald ta d-
naw ................... To
si MOAT.
Twejve. months malb)......
power during the twelve-month to
overcome this. The indication is that
the state. Since the 'Pittsburg meet-
ing the Federal Oil & Gas company has
secured an option on the holdings of
the Caney Valley Oil company, paying
$137,000 for the option. The new cer-
iteration since its organisation in.Jan-
ary baa also purchased large holding*
in Ohio and Pennsylvania. W. A.
Chase, attorney for the corporatfon,
stated today that the operations of
the concern will be confined to the pro-
most enduring persons of all the old
world.
But of course we must have a care
that the constant admixture of new
blood Into the social and political or-
ganism is not enough in quantity or
such 1n quality as to arrest or hinder
or vitiate the distinctly American
spirit which has been evolved during
thesa hundred years of progress.
Wherefore, our immigration laws
should more and more rigidly exclude
the depraved, the. vicious, the igno-
rant, the diseased and the Incapable.
But as to the great body of foreign-
ers who have come and are coming
to America, they are to be welcomed,
not to be feared, for we quickly teach
them American ways and they con-
stantly furnish us with new energy
and new 1deas.
For that matter, we are all foreign-
ers. or the descendants of foreigners.
Only the American Indians are his-
torically and racially native.
Oklahoma Charter* ssued.
Guthrie, Okla., Aug. 10—(Special.)-*
Charters were issued today to these
corporations:
Southern Ballast company of Musko- 1
gee, St. Louis, Mo. and Tester, Okla.$
capital stock. $100,000. Directors. J. IL
Cullinane of St. Louis. R. S. Legate of
Denison, Texas, and C. S. Cobb of Mus-
kogee. ,
Gibson Coal company (of Gbsn: capf-
tai, 12.500. Directors. T. F Hager J.
S. Willlams, I E. Phillips, G. W. Ent-
nest and W. S. Thomas of Looney, and
J. R. Renner cf Wllmouth.
B. B. A H. Paint company of Bar-
tlesville; captaj;' $20,000. Directors.
Isaac Hatcher of Emporia. Kan.. P. I.'
Buev C. T. Bonner. C. J. Huey and J.
I. Overlees of Bartlesville.
Okfuskee County Farmers’ institute
of Okemah Incorporators T. B. Wort-
man. Ed Stine and IF G. Haddox.
Newkirk Creamery A Ice company nf
Newkirk: capital. $15,000. Directers,
G. A, Chappell, J. F. Weaver, J. K,
Lcy, J. W Brian. H E. Bode. D. IL
Tompson and S. M. Miller.
Alpha cinb of Bartlesvill; capital. A
$5,000. V. H. Wsel, X p,A”
Sisk and W. J. Faxon. 4
.Oklahoma Hotel Supple company og
Oklahoma City; capital $5,000. pireg-
tors.E.M..Duncan. R. l- Wilktuscia
and R. W . Miller 45
THE WEST AND THE NORMAL.
The spirit, energy and good-natured
rivalry of twenty-eight West Texas
towns for the location of the new
state normal school is typical of the
men ofthe West Anyloealltywouid
be glad to have a state school located
in Its midst,—but nnwhara else than
in West Texas can be found so large
a number of' towns that will offer
land and cash almost sufficient to
endow a fair sized college. Nor are
Any erzoneeus redectton on th* character, ;
standing or reputatioa of any person, firm of
eorporation wbich mayappeer in the fto—s
of The Recoed will b gladly corrected upoD
ta being brought to th* attention ot the ““
art, has gone on a trip to Colorado.
Misses Pau ine Gladney, Willie
Lewis and Allene Perry will leave this
morning to attend a house party at
Ardmore. These young ladies will
spend several lays 4n Gainesville,
where they will be Nhe honorees at a
dance.
Nothing can stop them and all
Texas is proud of them. By a -pro-
cess of natural-solection they are the
beet type of daring, progressive, self-
reliant Americans. They are in the
main the men who have had the grit
pie has been supported by Aldricn.
His affirmative vote is found in the
biHle appropriating many millions of
dollars for Texas projects, and. many
of these projects might have suffered
greatly had he opposed them.
Senator Aldrich is a Republfcan,
and he is unquestionably a champion
of the protected interests, but that
does not mean that everything he
proposes or supports in the senate is
(contrary to the public welfare. He
has been instrumental during his long
service in placing much good legis-
lation upon the statute books, just as
he has helped to enact many, laws
that do not conserve the Interests of
the people. The duty of a Demo-
cratic senator is not to make It a
point to “vote against Aldrich” every
time, hot to scrutinize what Aldrich
proposes and vote for it if good and
against it if bad. Granting that this
plan might as a general rule array
the Democrats against Aldrich, as was
the case most'of the time during the
TELEPHONES.
Buslaras Office .......
Editorial Roems
Dallas AFKNCY: R o. Gatnen,
Maln and Akerd. Phone Mais
quite different from the one it proudly
floated over last march. This time the
chief architecture which it will deco-
rate will be a brush arbor. Th* crowd
which greets it will be full-blood
Cherokee Indians, members of the Kee-
toowah or Night Hawk organisation,
• and the place will be Tucker Springs,
in the heart of the Cherokee nation,
twenty-five miles from a railroad. At
this time the Keetoowahs will have
It now develops that Mrs. Castle,
who shot Lawyer Craig, was once
treated for insanity. Evidently she
Muskogee, Okla. Aug. 10.—(Speelal.%
The county officials of McIntosh coun-
ty have secured a complete list of tha
band of Fnake Indians who are sup-
posed to be responsible for the series
of disturbances near* Old Hickory
grounds covering a period of fifteen
years. 'This roster has been a b!g sur-
prise, for on it are fund the-names
of some prominent peorle of McIntosh
county. Th© roster contains the name*
of those who pay money to Crazy snake
for the purpose of maintining an or-
ganization and fighting fur thos
rights which the Indians think the gov-
ernment is unjustly depriving them of.
There ar© 300 names on the list, and it
Il understood that the annual assess-
ment to $3 per year, with special as-
sessments at times of unusual stress.
This monex to paiq to Crazy Snake ini
person and he is to use it. as his judg-
ment dictates and wthout question
from his followers. It to this system of
tribute that enables Crazy Snake to
maintain agents in Washiugton and to
make trp"to the national capital him-
self. Th!* list of names to believed to
be one of the mpst valuable finds that •
the officials hae made in their efforts
to break up thesnake elan, for it gives
a chance to place each one of the
members under observance and to keep
tab on his movements. Incidentally it
discovery, and some of the names on it
has caused a good deal of indignatto-
in that section of the country in which
mhet aore resent murders were com-
It is stated by those who are in very
close touch with th© situation that
armed men are now scattered in vari-
__2. 22, dertakings that are inspired by nobe
land the ne 2 and generous motive* and that include
C harged With Falling to Report Deaths
in Hospitni.
Guthrie, Okla.. Aug. 10—(Special.)-
The first arrest of a physician charged
with violation of the state heaithdnws
has been made at Hobart where Dr.
L H. Huffman was arrested on com-
plaint of Dr. G V. Stewart, county
health officer. The complaint alleges
that Dr. Huffman, who is superintend-
ent. ef ths Hobart hospital, failed to
report the deaths of Jack Pearson and
J. B. Moon. Th© law requires tvtry
physician to report alb'deaths to the
county health officer. Huffman was
arratgned before County Judge Man-
roll and released on $200 bond.
five times in sixty-gevon roll calls
taken on the Aldrich amendments.
Senator Aldrich would be a mon-
ster, indeed. If he were so bad a man
that no Democrat could vote with
him. The next
more inteligent
third generation
Americanized.
paper* have asserted that Senator
Bailey was an ally ot Alarich and that incline their subjectn to vngue
hnv, tried to create the tmpresslon dreamy thought,. They will probaby
■ - ---- have a he»n intellect, but will, need
Now if the rates on iron and steel absurdity of the tabie printed by Col- (lowing herbs: Carrots, winter savory,
■ have been .o Ightly pared that thollier’s showing th. number ot timez valetian, parsley, ondice. Mcortce, ren-
Democratic senators voted AS Senator
■ “power of extortion” of the steel Alrich did. "Such a publication is
2e ' trust “to not impaired.” wherein is'manifestly unfair” rhys the Banner.
$100,000, has been established. The
ago by direction of the ©tat© veterina-
rian. Tills cow beionged to a dairy
herd at Norman, and was milked up
until the time that it was killed. The
animal had become so diseased that
th© lun* was almost entirely destroyei
by the tubercular germ.
In the annual repott filed by the
state commissioner of health. Dr. J. L,
Mahr, particular attention was callt
othe dairy herds of Oklahoma. At
tnat time the dairy inspection was un-
der the jurisdict iop of Commissioner
Mahr, but the last legislature trans-
ferred this work to the state board oi
agriculture. In his report, Dr. Mahr
raid: "We now know positively that
there is tuberculosis in the dairy herds
of Oklahoma, and each dairy herd ta
the state should "be tested out for
tuberculosis. These cows that have
A New York doctor has found out
Oar sunshine to bad for blondes. The
kind we are having down in Texas
to also calculated to tan brunettes.
they content with th® offer of land
and money. More than 300 of the |
most enterprising and substantial men j
of ths West are here to prove to the
locating board each that he hails from
the town with the finest climate, the
best people and largest number ox
advantages in the world. Each of
these twenty-eight towns, according
to the statistics and affidavit-backed
arguments of its partisans, has the
lowest death rate, the most moral and
enlightened citizenship, the most
aeronautic bug. Maybe he thinks
eL _ since Papa Theodore has pre-empted
the earth he wi»F have a better chance
Es UP ia the air.
_ _______ tariff debate. It to still the part of an
each to destined to be the industrial. jhte]ngent Democrat__to pasa upon
re has developed the moral and educational center oT the p;very measure according to its merits.
the farms of New England by the
native American and the occupancy
by foreigners. It cites the typical
case of a farmer who became dis-
gusted with the hired help question
and sold out to a Dane who cannot
read or write, who works his wife
and children like oxen, through rain
or shine, week days and Sundays, and
makes a small fortune every year.
The editor thinks an American would
not do that, if he could, if he had
“to pay the price of lving the narrow
try. They combine the energy and
daring of the pioneer with the polish
ara education of the dweller in the
older settled section*.
Peopled by such a citizenship. West
Texas has a glorious future, for they
will make it great, rich and power-
ful.
The Record wishes there were
twenty-eight normal schools to be lo-
cated. but as there to only one. here’*
More Effective.
“The police force of London had a
hard time dispersing the suffrag-
ettes.”
"What did they want to call out
the police for?” 4
“Because the suffragettes were
making trouble.”
“Why didn’t they call out a
mouse?”
_______________— capig. W pmPtors,oTrorunkzna
the original county ; vis. H C. Cobb, Fred W. Davis Fred
- --------- -e"* p Bransen and S. M HllTigess ’
,,05. raNW-MI
"■ J I. y°w’v and Gaoree D. Rdeera.
.Musltezee Presma, Brink company ot
Mu)kogen capital.. 830,000, pfrectors,
A. n Bel! Prank Fe, ana J. iomeg
Gonem of.Muslsogee, and J. M. Parkin,
of Humboldt Kan
Oklahoma Quarries company of Ce4
ment: capital $25,000. Directors, A. D,
Baird, George J. Webb and Fred C.
Hver5.
12. This time it will be over a scene
And far, far under the frivol of things
The gowns and trip* and the good
cigars.
• There is a flutter of Angel wings-
‘ A true Jove beattaz against the bars
Conventionalit reara, end true
Where foreigners are grouped into
neighborhoods or communities they
retain, their habits and notions a long
time, out scattered throughout the
country or dispersed among the
smaller cities they are negligible as
political and social factors and they
soon merge into the American body
politic as average citizens
That to what makes the American
What to It the poet has said, that
“men
Must work.” 1t to something like
that. I think,
And -"women must weep;" It was dif-
ferent then
Than It is now, for the needful
chink
The man must work as he did those
days.
But the womnn don’t wpep so you’d
notice it.
The first bale of 1909 broom corn was
marketed here Saturday and brought
$70 a ton. The brush was grown by
Ray Brown and was of excellent qual-
ity. The crop here is xenerally in good
condition but rain would make a much
better yield.
Mrs. W. M. Dial has just returned
home from a trio to Honey Grove.
Mrs. W. A Hanger returned yester-
day from a six weeks’ visit in Pala-
elos.
Miss Christina Smoots of Dallas is
spending th© week with Miss Nona
Leach. ,
Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Newby returned
home yesterday from a trip to Gal-
veston.
Miss Myrtle Grant of Dallas arrived
Monday to be the guest of Miss Frieda
Downing.
Mre. C. M. Joyce has gone to Sulphur,
Okla., whers she will remain for sev-
eral weeks.
Federal Engineering & Constructing
pimPAnF.0"ormuisragcarteaamzo,ood:
Lyons and George A. Johns.
Italian Miners' Store company <>f
Eo8j1e. amme nded from the Italian Co-
Operative company: capital, $5,000. DI-
seghi Luigg Farrar An x
and Pellegrine Papquall . A
Scott ShawI dB
ne- capital IID.OJO Directors, M. N. KA We
r M,F Scott and ‘ w. Olvey. 2 k Work
K. W . Kinman ef Guthrie, was named dk E nre
Itfana,Ko. ““ Talea J“ company •
g ’ K __
Guthrie, Okla., Aug. 10.— (Special.)—
Fositive proof that dairy cows suffer-
ing from tuberculosis are being milked
in Oklahoma, and that their output is
being sold to the unsuspecting public,
is in the hands of the state health
department, and an active’ campaigr
is being waged to check this practice.
This work is being done in co-operation
with the state board of agriculture,
which was given an appropriation by
the last legislature for this purpose,
whibb became availabie July 1.
At the state board of health offices’
’ 1.00 life of the drudge and the brutal
of the summer.
Mrs. Matti© J. Young and daughter.
Hi~demas wt feave tot Rub’wTegn, „ett.Fen.coloradesprine:
ML Weekr W here Eney will spend the
PO6rAGE HATKS
Uni ed States and Metleo,
13-page paper.................
24 page paper.................
2 w paper.................
b-page paper.................
Movement Launched by Students tn
ISleet Dr. Boyd.
Guthrie, Okla., Aug. 10.—(Special.)—
Since the announcement that ex-Presi-
dent EHot of Harvard is being boomed
as a gubernatorial candidate in Massa-
chusetts, enthusiastic alumni have
launched a boom for David I. Boyd
These sturdy, go-ahead-and-do-it
westerners have converted cattle
ranges into modern cities and pro-
ductive farms. When railroads didn’t
come' to them fast enough they put
up the money and built them. When
they encountered obstacles they
Mexicans are beginning to cry
fraud when they are walloped in an
election. Mexico evidently is pro-
greasing.
-eca \ adsmmdon ekzma
remainder of the summer.
Mrs. Robert Beckham of Sabinal,
who had been the guest of Mrs.-R. E.
Beckham for the past week, han gone
on a few days' visit to Mrs. IL F. Tur-
ner of Ardmore.
Mrs. Oliver Smith of Roswell, N. M.,
who -as been the guest of Mrs. B.R.
Webb of Henerson street, will leave
for a visit to (reenviile thia morning,
but will return to Bort, Worth within
a days.
Mrs. Frances Moore entertained Mr
and-MF-.W.—P.—etewar*' of Jacksboro- ■
last week. Mrs. Stewart was en route
to Abilene and Mr. Stewart, accompa-
nied by his nephew, Mri Graham tew-
Loeni Social Notem-
Mrs, R. C. Jenkins spent Saturday in
Dallas.
Mrs C H. Maddox is at home after
a visit to Waco.
Miss Lillie Breeding is visiting
friends in Lagrange.
Mias Mabel Daniel is now at home
after a visit to Blum. t
Mrs. Wilber Hardwicks is spending
the summer in Colorao.
Miss Veta Brigance has returned
home from Mineral Wells.
nard college.
Mrs. J. j. Hall has gone on a visit
to JusUn, where she will be the guest
of her sister.
Miss Gussie E. Green, who had been
in California for ths past month, has
returned home.
Mrs. C. H. pear has returned home
from a visit to her slater. Mrs. Homer
Carroll of Quanah.
Mrs. C. A Bickley of Riverside is
visiting her parents, Bev. and Mrs. Q
F McCarver of Pecna__________________
Mr. Stewart Wagoner of New York
to on a shrt visit to his parents, Mr.
and MfK H. Wagoner. •
Miss Mana Marie Faylor of $05 May
street to visiting her grandmother,
Mrs. Rudmose, in Merkel.
Mrs. D. V. Williams and son of Cal-
ifornia arrived yesterday to- be the
guests of Mrs. George Clayton.
Miss Nora Bishop is visiting pohts
Seined With Cramps, Drowns.
Watonga, Okla., Aug. 10.—(Special.*
While attempting to swim across a
lake near here, Floyd Caklin, 37 years
cd, was seized with eramps, and sank
in sixteen feet of water. Hs compan-
ions, who were In a skiff, hurried to
his relief, but wHn taken out of the
vater, Conklin was beyond resuscita"
tion.
At a recent meeting in Ptttsburg tha
corporation closed a deal for the pur-
chase of the Nowgta, Bartlesvilio and
Muskogee, Okla., Aug. 10.—(Special.) | Hogshooter oil fieiof Oklahoma, with
The White House flag, th© one which a total production of 8,800 barrels rally -
ftontec over me white House ihatmatel socper artefThe "
stormy day when President Taft was the corporation in these Gelds compris »
2,900 acres of the richest oil lands tn
great benefits for others as well as
for those who initiate them.
Partnerships or associations for the
furtherance of objects in which all
participants are equally interested
and in which all are to share fairly
and fully, should be formed today and
will start under auguries that promise
abundant success,.
Commercial transactions by, and
with women are under bright signs.
All who deal with them should bene-
fit.
The day is marked as excellent-for
shopping, laying in 'household sup-
plies and dealing with salespeople.
Dressmaking, cooking, baking,
household entertainment^ family cel-
ebrations. recepttons. dinners, dances
and similar pleasures should be suc-
cessful.
Venus glows fervently for’lovers and
makes brilliant auspices for court-
•hips, engagements, weddings, wed-
ding journeys, beginning new house-
holds and celebrating anniversaries.
Under Mercury today are the fol-
tection." Further along 4n the same hoping that the best town will win.
and study the way we used to in high school. We always used to do it
there.”
“That’s just it,” she answer* them. "You always did it when you
shouldn’t have and now, of course, you can't And because you overtaxed
your strength then, now, when you need it so much, you haven’t any.”
“If I had a girl of 14 or 15 or 16," said a prominept woman doctor,
discussing the case of a sickly little book-worm she was trying to bring
back to health. "I'd try to have her climb trees andfump fences and
be just as much of a tomboy as she possibly could.”
A mind developed at the expense of a weakened body becomes like a.
skilled artisan condemned always to work with blunted tools.
Mental vigor, however abundant, can never accomplish all it might,
without physical vigor to support it.
“Health,” some great "writer has said, “is a crown on the head of the
healthy; no one sees it but the sick.”
Take your daughter's books away, drive her out of doors and in every
way you can, see to it that she may be one who unconsciously wears this
fair crown and not of those who sadly admire it on the head of another.
generation will be
and at least the
will be completely
EW ■' 1 ----The scretary of the —treasury has
59 I started out to get a dollar's worth of
.5 work out of every’ dollar Uncle Bam
pays for clerk hire in his department
#0092
m
WATCH THE PRICES. (homes in all parts of the union and
In its daily roast of Senator Bailey i dare to cast their lot in a new coun-
the
There is a distinguished difference
I I between Texas and the speed crank.
When Texas got soaked she smiled
j- in glee, and when tha police magis-
trate soaked the speed crank he hol-
lered murder.
—0
Co
The
L . hibit
\ the
6 8 re <
■ f arra
if dent
7 ciati
i been
/ the c
) ed A
. to be
, / Texa
Bamples seat free on appileatiou-
useribene destring the addresa of their
paper changed wil please stare iu .Co
inumnication both the old and the pew sddrr—■
RICCO RD RAvELANG AGENTS.
The foDowing traveling rtpcesrntatves
uthorined to recript tar suhecriptow “K.
tataa. m‘BtLozn..F. a W.t Sctucu*
“fa 223 kicafans.cirhtaticaXadacee
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The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 299, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 11, 1909, newspaper, August 11, 1909; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1495174/m1/4/: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .