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A DDRESSED L crowd mm in Hon. Champ Clark, speaker of the ticket. house of representatives and candidate for president, spoke to a crowded house at the Auditorium aSturday night. Bar ring a very hoarso voice the speaker was in good trim and delivered a strong speech dwelling largely on the subject of tariff legislation. West Virginia For Clark. Washington, D. C, Tost: Hon. S. V. Matthews, chairman of the republl- Thc Only Logical One. Panhandle (Tex.) Herald: Presi dent Champ Clark sounds good to us, Many people in Texas express the con viction that Champ Clark and Williau. H. Taft will face each other next fall a CI self," is our foremost man before the public and hence has a foundation to support a nomination at the hands of r. by its very nature. No frank mind can doubt that the great systems of special privilege and monopolisties advantage that have been built up have been built up upon the foundation of the tariff. The tariff question is at the heart of every other economic question . . . . . .... we nave to aeai witn, ana until we have dealt with that properly we can deal with nothing In a way that will be satisfactory and lasting." Governor Wilson is for tariff for revenue only," first, last and all the- time. He believes that tariff revision is the most pressing need of the coun try, and that the people are right in their determination to settle this quea tion unequivocally at the coming elec tion. "We have under our federal system s candidates for the presidency. Mr. a great many governments to support. lark as speaker has "proved him- Direct taxes must, for the most part, be in i it e f(iiiiiii ill hh ill it hsi iri?iiii;i 11.. .1 . .... . " uiH democrats. nv not Clark fo said: "So far as I have been able to rndeut anyway? We have numbers observe there has been no marked of folkge profeB8ors an(1 SOIne forty change in the sentiment among the (1(II tnvurnn w i p . v .iui m, wv4v win; i H'KIU 4.1 1 democrats of my state. They appear to be for Speaker Clark, and although I am not In the confidence of the dem ocrats, it is uiy guess that Clark will get the West Virginia delegation in the convention." The Strongest Team. Sioux Falls, (S. I).) Public: In the opinion of The Public the strongest team that could be nominated by the democrats would be Champ Clark of Missouri and Governor Kugene I'oss of Massachusetts. This combination years in the limelight, as an able ex ilian for president Champ Clark, the speaker. Kern Thinks Well of Clark. News (Buffalo, N. Y.) : Senator Kern, of Indiana, who was Bryan's rut. nlng mate In the last presidential cite tion, says: "I think well of Speaker Champ Clark. He would make an ii'l- mirablo chief executive." The Strongest Candidate Times (Detroit, Mich.): Speaker Clark has been for about eighteen would carry not only New Jersey, but ponent of democratic doctrine. He Massachusetts, probably New Hamp shire, and almost certainly New York; while in the south, anw middle west where most of the democratic states lies, they would lone a probable state; Indiana would be certain; Wisconsin in the event of Taft's nomination, while Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, and Min nesota would be good fighting ground, and could be counted on for the demo cratic ticket. Clark Can United Democrats. Shenandoah. (Iowa) World: Champ Clark can unite: Uio democratic party of the nation. Besides, ho will be whol ly acceptable to the progressive repub licans who desire to have their pro presslve ideas written into the legisla tion of the country. The more Champ Clark's record la examined the more it will be found to line true with the very things that the man who works for a living and the man who desires only a square deal In government mat-! ters, is entitled to demand. We uhi- cerely hope to see Champ Clark noni-. has been tried thoroughly and lias ac quitted himself with great ability in one of the most trying foruma in the world as the leader of the minority, a most critical position in any repre sentative government. He has led the party last year, and established a splendid record, as the second man in the nation politically, a record which must commend itself to the people, and by and through which the national democracy must make great gains. Our president leader should come from the ranks. Who in the ranks of the democrats stands such a show of success as does Speaker Champ Clark? We like Clark. He 1 a man of great natural ability, thoroughly polished and educated; but what is more, he is a man of experience and ripened judge ment. He is competent and has done (he fjjosit difficult work of statesman ship with a breadth' of mind "arid - a thoroughness, which is very refresh ing and should appeal to democratic minds. This Is why we favor Champ inated for president on the democratic Clark for president. WHAT EDITORSSftY OF WILSON New York, Jan. 1. The following is from the New York World: A quizzical smile stole over the in tellectual features of Woodrow Wilson, governor of New Jersey, as he leaned back in his chair and repeated question: "What is a yrogVe-aaive democrat?" The former president of Princeton University paused for a moment, un hooked his eye glasses from a little .tfold catch on his vest and, holding them in his hand to emphasize his reply, said: "I can best answer that question by first trying to define a republican. I do not mean a progressive republican for a progressive .republican is only a republican in a way to become a democrat but an orthodox republican, ..still dominated by the older standards .of his party.. : An orthodox reputuican is a man u-ho reallv believes that the covern- ment of the country ought to be a sort of trusteeship; that those who have the biggest material stake in its industrial affairs should be made the trustees, and that all policy should be made to conform to ttieir judgment and interest, in the expectation that, as trustees, they will hand on to those whom their enterprise controls a fair and reasonable share of the prosperity of business. "Now, a progressive democrat is a man who' sees, what ought to be patent to everybody, that these self-constituted trustees have been both blind and selfish; that a dangerous and inequit able system of business has been built up and that changes must be effected which will square tl commercial and industrial methods of the country with the general interest, the interest of the people at large, as understood by the peopl themselves and not by spe cial coteries. When the representa tives of 'big business thing of the peo ple, they do not include themselves." Forestalling the next question, Gov ernor Wilson continued: "What policies characterize progres sixe democracy? All those policies whose object is to wrest government from the control of special groups of men, and restore It to the control of tne general opinion of the country. AH the policies that re-establish tu con nection between representatives and the people. All well-considered meas ures that will tend to re-establish gen eral opportunity and freedom of enter prise. , "It will need wide common counsel to work such policies out. No one class or group of men can work them out alone. The man of affairs and the pol iticlan must come into conference with the student and the ardent reformer. "Do you not think that there everywhere manifest a very great dis content with existing conditions?" was the next question. "Most nssurdedlv. It Is disconten t"e with the trusteeship and its results. r roni Governor Wilson s manner there could be no doubt that he has abundant confidence in his own ability to "meet and correct" the existing evils. So the next question was: Is the demand of business men to be 'let alone reasonable in the cir cumstances:" Governor ilson toyed for a mo iiient with a pencil on the desk, and said: "The demand docs not come from the rank and file; It comes from those who have created the very conditions we w ish to correct. They wish so far as I can make their program out to have the government accent the con sequences of what they have done, legaliz" them, and assume control of them, without the least effort at cor lection. "There is nothing the matter with the mass of business in this country It is as sound as it ever was. No change contemplated need touch ordinary bus iness men at all, except to set them free of some of the trammels and dis advantages luuler which they now labor. The very object in view Is to set business free freo from the con trol of the few and then let it alone to follow its own right laws. "What are the business men of the country? Are not the fanners busi ness men? Are not the small traders business men? Is not the' sub-contractor a business man as well as the con-traetor-in-chicf ; the man who Is build ing up enterprise as well as the man who has built it up? Is not the man whose credit Is small and "on the make' a business man as well as the- man whose credit is unlimited i.rd es tablished? Is not every employer of labor, every purchaser of material and every master of any enterprise, big or little, and every man in a profession, a business man? 'These smaller men, who constitute the body of the nation, so far as busi ness is concerned, do not want to be let alone. They want to be set free of artificial trammels, of high prices, and of the restricted opportunities that have been created by oud tariff-walled system of privilege." "What is to be the greatest issue of the coming campaign?" There was no hesitation In Governor Wilson's u:i swerf ' "The GuilT. of course. It must be so left to the individual states. The gov ernment at Washington must depend chiefly on indirect taxes. "But a great system of industry has, as a matter of fact, been built up on the basis of a protective tariff, and the question of statesmanship ahead of us is one of fairness and good judgment. It is a question of expediency in the large sense of that word. Where shall we bring our tariff duties to a revenue h?r.!a fit filinfl' Wtiopa mnof ut cri wum.u . fc. .' I HV I Vi 1111.11. 11 , slowly and ease the process off by well considered, gradual measures of reduc tion. "With regard to some schedules it is already abundantly evident what it is just and necessary to do. Congress in the special session showed that Is un derstood which they were and how they ought to be dealt with. The pres ident did not seem to understad either the spirit and purpose of congress or the temper and opinion of the coun try." "But, governor, it is being urged that the interests of the east and west are divergent as to the tariff. Do you think that is so:" "No; the interests of the east and west do not seem to me to be diver gent in any Important matter of na tional policy." "What effect has the tariff had on wages? Governor Wilson was next asked. "Very' little, directly. When wages have risen they have generally risen more in response to the demand of or ganized labor than from any other cause. The men who have chiefly prof ited by the tariff have no many of them voluntarily shared its benefits with -weir- workmen. " The- working- men of the country have been grossly deceived about this matter from the first. But, fortunately for the coun try, their eyes are being opened now to the real facts and to the real forces that are at work." A pile of reports of Investigating committees, and of the Department of Commerce and Labor, on the gover nor's desk was evidence of the inter est he takes in the so-caleld "trust problem. It suggested the next line of questioning. "How are the trusts to be dealt with?" "The tariff lies at the bottom of much o fthe trust question. That is the rea son why the tariff question is the cen tral and dominating question. It is behind the shelter of the tariff wall that the trusts have been able to build up a system by which they have limit ed opportunity and all but shut the door upon independent enterprise." 'Will the reduction of the tariff schedules by which the greatest trusts thrive vltrualiy solve the trust ques tion, then?" "By no means. It will do a vast deal to cut away the artificitl advantages upon which the trusts depend for es tablishing monopoly; but there is some thing beyond that. Looked at from the side of business organization, the trusts are chiefly a means 6f economy and efficiency. It is from that side that they are so vigorously and persuasive ly defended by their advocates and by many thoughtful students of modern economic effort. But, along with their efficient organization goes a tremend ous power anu they have used that power to throttle competition and es- iblish virtual monopoly in every mar ket that they have coveted." Do you think, governor, that com petition can be re-established by law?" "It is not necessary to answer that question until we have done what the iw certainly can do. The methods by the greater trusts have driven com petitors out of business are well known So are also the methods by which those who have financed them have seen to It that those who tried to es tablish rival enterprises were prevent-; ed from doing so. There are lawyers available who can describe these methods with abundant precision In statutes. Those methods can be made criminal offenses and the monopolistic use of trusts can be stopped by the punishment of every person who tries to make such use of their power. "Guilt is always personal .and we shall never get at the root of these things by changing merely the size and organization of our business corpora tions. The offenses they have been committing against freedom of oppor tunity ad of enterprise are well known and can be put a stop to. It is not a question of their size, but of their acts These have been brought out in del U' by the inquiries of half a dozen com mittees and many legal contests." Punctuation In Piano Playing .) WANTED Men to learn the bar- Joke is going the rounds of the ber trade. Here, is an offer that In press about the girl whose music eludes tools with tuition. A method teacher wished to compliment her but j that saves years of apprenticeship, of whom he could only say that she j Positions waiting in city or country played the rests excellently. This is, however, real praise of a sort, for It Is not every young student of music who Is careful about playing the rests well. , Indeed a great many players seem to forget that the rests are Just as much of the piece as is the punctu ation in a sentence. Nowadays peo ple do net put in so much punctuation as they used to do, but the pauses la the voice are there Just the same and are readily understood by good read ers, and always regarded. The rests In music are like the pauses in read ing that are needed to give expres sion to the sentences. If the player slights the rests or extends them too long the whole effect of the musical sentence is spoiled. shops. Dallas, White Tex. Moler Barber College, Telephone Conversations as Evldenos. In a recent case It was admitted that a telephone conversation had tak en place between a representative of the plaintiff and the defendant, but it wag claimed on the part of the defendant-appellant that each party to the conversation could testify only to what he said and could not testify to what he heard through the telephone, presumably upon the ground that he might have misunderstood what the other party said. In declaring this objection untenable the appellate dlvi sion In the second department perti nently said that such a rule would ad mit fragments of conversation, per hapa meaningless and probably unln. structive. "The conversation, that is, what one said and the other replied. la the only Intelligible and helpful evi dence." Bench and Bar. Profit In Growing Vegetables. In a report published by the depart ment of commerce and labor on the farming carried on by Italians in Hammonton, N. J., we have such litems as a nee pront or iieo rrom a 'quarter acre of strawberries; $5,000 net profit in two years from 50 acree lof raspberries, by an Italian hardly able to speak or write English; $3,000 net profit on dewberries and black 'berries, acreage not given; a father land son bought a farm (acreage not stated) for $2,000, leaving a mortgage of $600. In. one season, 1906, they ipaid the mortgage and all their living expenses and saved $800 In addition. ;An Italian laborer In the limits of Greater New York city made as much, as $1,600 net profit from little more ; than an acre and a half of land last lyear, growing vegetables for the market RAILROAD TIME TABLE. FRISCO. North and East Bound. Leave Vinita No. 414 K. C. Meteor 1:40 a. m. No. 12 California Express. .3:45 a. m. No. 124 Hustler 6:46 a. m. No. 416 Joplin Express 9:43 a. m. No. 2 Eastern Express. . .3:55 p. m. No. 408 St. Louis Limited ..7:05 p. m. No. 10 St. Louis Meteor. . 11:44 p. m. South and West Bound. No. 2 Okla City & S. W.. . 2 : 05 a. m. No. 413 Ok. City from K. C..3:30 a. 1 1. No. 407 Ok City fr K.C.-St.L.9:24 a. m. No. 1 Fast Mall 12:01 p. m. No. 11 California Express,. 1:20 p. in. No. 415 Sapulpa Express . ..8:15 p. m. Jo. 123 Hustler 11:18 p. m. M K. & T. RAILWAY. North Bound. Leave Vinita No. 2 K. C. & St. Louis. ...12:08 a. m No. 4 K. C. & St. Louis 9:15 a.m. No. 6 Flyer ..6:22 p. m No. 8 Parsons Bob 3:50 p. m No. 10 Katy Limited 5:15 a. m. South Bound. AO. l lexas Express a. m. No. 3 Texas Express 7:10 p.m. No. 5 Flyer 9:45 a. m No. 7 Fast Mail.... 11:45 a. m No. 9 Katy Limited ...... 11 : 28 p. m WE LEAD FARM LOANS IN 35,000.00 This Month Reasonable rates, Quick-service. PARKER-WISE Co Farmers Bank Building PHOTOGRAPHS For best grades of Permanent PHOTOS FOWLER East of Railroad Crossing ROBT. L.SCOTT FEED SEEDS E. A. STUBBLEFIELD, D. M. D. Dentist Rates Reasonable Examination Free All Operations Made as Painless as Possible and All Work Guaranteed omnoform used for Painless Extraction OFFICE: ROOM 9. SCOTT BUILDING DR. F. L. HUGHSON Physician and Surgeon Phones 625 Residence 525 W.Delaware OfficeOver Wimer Drug Store DR. F. L. MARNEY Graduate Veterinarian Office, Webb Bros. Livery Phone 143 Vinita, OKU MRS. W. B. CRAWFORD Singing and Piano Lessons Pupil of William Sherwood, Piano and Vernon d'Arnalle, Singing Barrett-Buffington Building Phone 295. Dr. Louis Bagby Dr. C. S. Neer DRS. BAGBY & NEER Office in First National Bank Building,. India's Toll Paid to Wild Animals. ( Wild animals and the damage they jdo make an Interesting chapter in ;the blue book of India. The latest eta jtlstics are for the year 1909 public (documents are proverbially slow in ap fpearing and there, carefully set down, are statistics showing that In one year snakes killed 19,700 persons, tigers devouring an even 900, leopards 300. wolves 270 and other animals 686. i When It comes to cattle and other jfarm animals, the leopards were most destructive, since they made way jwith 42,000, tigers coming next with 28,000, wolves with 10,000, while snakes have only 9,800 charged against ,them. . But man was not altogether lazy, since he killed 70,000 serpents and 17,900 tigers, leopards and wolves. j WILLIAM T. RYE Attorney and Counselor-at-Law Room 6 Scott Building VINITA OKLAHOMA THEO. D. B. FREAK attorney and Counselor-at-Lav Rooms I and 2. Cherokee Building DR. 0. C. HEIDTMAN Dentist EXAMINAT'ON FREE All Work Guaranteed IWimer Building Vinita. OKI C. W. DAY Dentist GOLD CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK A SPECIALTY Office In Empire Block VINITA If You Have Farm Lands For Sale list it with me. 1 have agents in other states and can sell your land. Have sold over $40,000 worth in the last thirty days. Write Fire insurance in Good Companies. i R. P. CLAY Barrett Building Phone 669 DR. R. L. MITCHELL Cowan Bailding Phones; Office 607 Residence Red 479 VINITA, OKLA The Might of One Man. The dwellers In Kensington's most i charming and Old World square can ,now sleep o' nights without fear that the too enterprising "flat" builders iwlll encroach on th green tnrt tnil greener trees or Edwardee Square and ;turn it Into a wilderness of bricks and ; mortar. For and this is where the Edwardes Squareltes score there still exists the old charter, which provides that so long as there is a male resi dent In the square the property must be loft imact. This is a great Joy to the dwellers thereon, many of whom have promptly proceeded to become absolute owners of their houses.- Lady's Pictorial. New Auto Motive Power. ; Automoblllsts In England they call them motorists over there are much 'Interested in the success of an inven tion known as solid petrol." or gaso line In little bricks. Its exact compo k1: ion Is. of conrso, a secret. It eon fains SO per cent, of ordinary gaaoline. a percentage of soapy matter, and one per cent, of a foreign substan.-o which gives it Botidlty. A small blook of it is said to be equal to a gallon of liquid motive power, and its In ventors say that enough to propel a car 1,200 miles can be carried In a lit tle box on the running board of the Brilliant but Unkind. jonn w. Yerkes, formerly commis sioner of Internal revenue, was on cn excursion given by a bar association. In one rowboat, where a landing from the big excurbion , craft was made there were several ' lawyers whom Yerkes did not like. Suddenly the;, rowboat capsized. "There goes to the tettom now," he remarked, "a lot of good booze and bum law." WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY THE MERRIAM WEBSTER Tha Only New unabridged dic tionary in many years. Contains the pith and essence of an authoritative library. Covers every field of knowL. edge. An Encyclopedia in a single book. The Only Dictionary with the New Divided l'age. 400,000 "Words. 2700 Pages. 6000 Illustrations. Cost nearly half a million dollars. Let us tell you about this most remarkable single volume. Write for sample is, full paxv julara, etc yams this paper and we will sand re i set of Pocket Stapa G.AC. Kermis Co. 1 Sprlng-Setd Mw.f ai wxiuv . DR. A. W. HERRON Physician and Surgeon Office in Barrett Building 108ya South wiison street Office Phone 263, Residence Phone 18S Residence 223 South Adair Street DR. J. R. BAIRD Graduate of Veterinary Surgery Fifteen Years Practice All diseases of domestic ani mals Satisfactorily Treated Phone 298 Residence Phone 399 East Side Livery Barn W. B. DEPUE Attorney-at-Law VINITA OKLAHOMA Special Attention Given to Examination And Correction of Land Titles. REV. W. H. McCANN Notary Public Kinnison and Hollow, Ok!a. Your Business Solicited. JAMES S. DAVENPORT Attorney-at-Law Office Rooms 9 & 10. New Hal3ell Bldg VINITA OKLAHOMA To Someone Else. Maud Jack vows he'll marry you yet Ethel Maybe if he goes In for the ministry. Knew Mia Man. Gibbs I called yesterday to bor row ten dollars, but you were not in. Dibba Yes I was. I was In ten do! lars. U. S. DEPOSITORY Fund Five Civilized Tribes The U. S. Government has' appointed this bank as depository for a portion of the funds of the five civilized tribes which shows the GOVERNMENT'S CONFIDENCE in this bank. r irst Capital $2$,MQ National Centralta. Okla. BanR Surplus $7,000