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The Wichita Eagle from Wichita, Kansas • Page 4

Publication:
The Wichita Eaglei
Location:
Wichita, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

3. 4 THE X7ICHITA HAGLH, EUtlDAT IIQ2I7II7G, JUI7IJ 2, 1017 AMUSEMENTS! WicKita Daily Eagls This Lock Iihe a Dcile Cress, AO's Fdr hXlti Stories for Bedtime THE NEST-EGG GIVES UJfC BILLY 1 1 V- to worry through, to pin. any-, great hope of German defeat on the present crop situation. But even the German authorities have admitted that last year's crop was considerably below the average; they have been counting otf'a large crop thi3 year to -do away with the necessity for rationing, and to restore German confidence and hope. Even though a sufficient-crop for bare living may be harvested in spite of the drought, it is evident that Germany will have to continue an-i other year on scant allowance.

And that will increase tremendously the task of the war lords in holding the German people in the trenches. IW-Y- 1 I 'J v' 77 1 1 I I Ttivo law 7ZEV I I 1 with jvst rwa rJ TiMES TB amount i J-f- CL---J 1 VE HA WTS APEP I isirr" 1 (take Tt I 7 ntctix 1 1 xjL 1FC tea- pa M.Hlri i yi ill iiii ill i a ir i mm i mi i i i 11 i ma i ti i 'Tis little things that often eeera Scare a passing-thought Which In the end may prove that they With big results are fraught. Farmer Brown's Boy watched Jimmy Skunk calmly and peacefully go his way and grinned as he watched him. He scratched his head thoughtfully. 'l suppose," said ie, "that that Is as perfect an example of the value of preparedness as there is.

Jimmy knew that I knew, that he knew that I knew that he was all ready for trouble If I chose to make It and that-because' of that I wouldn't make "It. So he has calmly gone his way as if he were as much bigger than I as I am bigger than he. There certainly Is nothing ijjke bein prepared if you want to avoid trouble." Then Farmer Brown's boy once more turned to the henhouse and. entered it. He looked to make sure that no hen had been foolish enough to go to sleep Where Jimmy could have caught her, and satisfied of this he would have gone about his usual morning work of feeding the hens but for one thing, That one thing was the china nest- egg on the floor.

"Hello!" exclaimed Farmer Brown's boy when he saw It- "Now how did that come there? It must be that Jimmy Skunk pulled it out of one of those lower nests." Xotk, How Did That Come There Now, he knew just which nests had contained nest-eggs and it didn't take but a minute to find that none wa missing in any of the lower nests. "That's queer," he muttered. "That egg must have come one of -the upper nests. Jimmy couldn't have got up to those. None of the hens could have kicked ft out last night-because they were all on the roosts when I shut them -up.

They certainly didnt do it this morning because they would not ave dared leave the roosts with Jimmy Skunk here. I'll have to look So he began with the second row i vvw.M riw i Hm ia aw, mw I tii a a i ii mi rtn nzz 7awjj iwl uium nut II KmmmimL ill i mV mr UEEBUWH I ii THE SCREE3T FORUM: Alice Joyce and Harry Morey'lh "Womanhood." HOLLAND: "Carlyle Black well and June Elvldge In Price of Pride." 1 PALACE: Enid Bennett ia Hap-. piness." PRINCESS: Seena Owen In A Woman's Awakening. STAR: British official war pictures. THE GOOD AND THE BAD ON TODAY'S BILLS.

HAPPrXESSw "Happiness is aptly named, for there ia much of that in it. It stars Enid Bennett, one of the newer screen luminaries, and tells a story of a little girl well supplied with this world's goods, but quite lacking in the state of mind after which the photoplay is named. Unable to get along with the people at home, she is shipped away to a coed college and there she meets with a very chilly reception. For it has gone abroad that the mtle Udy is the hig Be8t-8n0D ln the unlverSe. and that par ticular college, being very snobbish It self, has no use for her.

However, she does find happiness there in a most unexpected manner. One of the boys, hard put to It to earn his way through college, finally is com- pelled to take in washing to get enough money to finish his education. She be-j comes one of his customers, not know ing who he. Is, and they finally meet and, in amusing fashion, she learns the secret Instead of blowing up, cutting his acquaintance and taking her trade away from. him.

they become fast friends and she Joins the corporation. From that time on she finds plenty- of the real article. She is happy from mornlne till nieht. quite content In her queer companionship with a laun-dryman. Of course trouble brews.

There is another snob who, finding himself unacceptable to the young lady, starts out to find the reason for it. He Is' not long in dlscovering.it and then proceeds to take revenge. This, however, is not as sweet as he hasex-pected It to be. but adds a lot of zest to the picture. Miss Bennett is very attractive as the rich girl without, friends.

She is natural and. sympathetic, looks well and appears human. So much i so that one Is dad the ending Is Droverbiallv hratmr. Little Miss Thelraa Salter, one ofi the rising generation of screen stars, is "very sweet as the kiddy who carries i the wash and brings the two young people together. She seems to enjoy! her work as much as the spectators en-Joy her, and that always helps a lot.

"Happiness" is a most attractive, 1 clean, wholesome and thoroughly enjoyable picture. A WOMAN'S AWAKENING" A Woman's -Awakening" shows can write screen -stories to advantage through practical.khowledge of screen i limitations and. possibilities. Mr. Woods has, besides a native gift of story tell ing, an intlmate relation with" studio! requirements and thecast In hand.

He begins his preparation in "A Woman's Awakening" with a -deliberation which would hardly be permissable in a script submitted for approval by an outsider. He goes at the gradual deterioration of character in a sweet country girl with grows weaKer and weaKer her vatn attempts to resist city lures, just as in real life, and finally marries a worthless adventurer who has been the leading instrument in her downfall. Not until after marriage does the country girl get the true measure of the man to whom she is tied for life. She attempts to bargain with him when he is in peril of being thrown into jail for his financial operations. She secures a loan from a true hearted man, and her worthless husband, true to form, breaks his pledge and uses the' kindly act against her.

Retribution comes from a source unexpected to him though carefully planted for the audience. All through the story Is shown her crippled mother, a silent sufferer unable to move about except in a wheel chair. At regular and impressive intervals thfs Invalid is shown, wholly inactive, but listening and thinking, a Nemesis destined to mete out punishment to the decadent husband, who finally" kills him with his own revolver at a time when he received a note which might cause self-destruction. The verdict is that he committed suicide. The secret that there was no suicide is guarded by her daughter and "the manly fellow who helped her In an hour of need, but it Is the cause of distrust between these two each suspects the other of having committed the murder.

This condition of mutual distrust, the concluding tension, is relieved by the mother's confession that she killed the destroyer of her daughter's happiness, and the, story ends with the reconciliation of two true hearts. The release in a genuine screen story by a man who knoa-s how to write one, who is steadily improving in his composition, and it will be welcome everywhere by those who enjoy real moving pictures. The "cast Is flawless and the direction without blemish, a fine example of the new art. I THE PRICE OP PRIDE" of nests and looked in each. Then helof that small coterie or authors wno started on the upper row and so hei came to the nest in which Unc Billy 'Possum was hldinar lindpp Vi ir nnrl holding his breath.

No, Unc' Billy had covered himself up pretty well with the hay, but he had forgotten one thing. He had forgotten his tail and it hung just over the edge of the nest. Of course Farmer Brown's boy saw it. He couldn't help but see it. "Ho, ho!" he exclaimed right away.

Ho, hoi So there was" more than i IE 100, AliS 0I1LY 23 W. W. Zingery, of Empire Office in Augusti Sold Healdton Lease for Fortuned Another member was added to the rapidly growing list of Augusta's wealthy oil men today when W. W. Zlngery of that place closed a deal whereby he disposed of his interest in a lease on 120 acres in the wonderful southeast extension of the Healdton pool to eastern capitalists for a consideration of $100,000.

The lucky seller of this property is a young man, but 23 years of age, haying attained that which many men spend a life tinSe in HAS MAG ii Founded in 1S72-by Marshall" M. Mur-: dock. Published by the Victoria Murdock Kstate, i Largest Circulation In Wichita: In Sedgwick County, and Larger in Its Entire Field Than Any Other Daily fC! Newspaper Published in Kansas. Circulation guarantee established Dy Regular Statements to Audit Bureau of Circulations. Entered at the Postoff ice in Wichita.

Kansas, for Transmission Through the eMails as Second Class Matter. The Wichita Eagle, Daily and Sunday, by Mail Outside of Wichita. $1.30 for Three Months. $5.20. for One Year.

Week. 10c. Single Copies. Week Days, Two Cents; Sundays, Five Cents. The S.

Beckwlth Special Agency, Sole Agents Foreign Advertising. Tribune Chicago; Tribune New York City; Third National Bank St. Louis; Ford Detroit. Journal Kansas City. Mo.

SStesS? Market 4 4 0 0 THE RAVINGS OF GORE Senator Gore of Oklahoma raves against the food control bill because, he says, it waskjdrawn by a lawyer. Being himself a lawyer, the senator perhaps realizes the necessity of be ing on guard against all the works of hi 8 profession. But in this case his fear is ungrounded. If the senator himself knew less law, and less petty politics, and a little more about nrac-tical business, and especially agriculture, he would not have made so egregious an ass of himself before the whole nation. Just happens that Ahe food bill has been drawn chiefly by Herbert O.

Hoover, who has had more experience in this work than any other living man. Bu he has had the help of agricultural experts from all over the United States. He is receiving the co-operation of practically all organisations of farmers. The opposition comes largely from small bore lawyers, like the Oklahoma senator, who are serving the interests of the food speculators and stock gamblers and big business men, from motives that are apparent to themselves if not to the rest of the nation. Andr-joined with these -business interests and their sycophants, are all the treasonable brood of pro-German plotters who still infest the United States.

Senator Gore and those he rep-; resents may for a time delay action, but they cannot stop it. For the whole nation is aroused, and proposes to put an end both to food gambling arid to German plotting. WAITING ON US The war against Germany against militarism Is not' a war of divided nations, but allies. To be effective, the United States cannot go way; she must work with her allies. The chief requisite for the defeat of kaiserism is food.

It is impossible for each of the allied nations to feed only Itself. That way would lie anarchy and defeat. All must pool their interests, and work harmoniously together. But in this matter the other allies must wait upon America. It Is this nation that holds the world's greatest stock of food.

Great Britain and Canada have both appointed food controllers, they can do little until America also takes control of its food supply away from the speculators and hoarders, and distributes it with regard to the needrnot only of America, but of our European allies as well. There is enough food for all. If the nations work together, everybody can have enough, and at reasonable prices. Unless the United States has food control; chaos will result. The allies will bid ay-4nst us in our own markets, price will skyrocket, scarcity will result.

Germany will be the only nation to benefit from such a policy. WIIAT IT'S ABOUT German apologists are attempting to make it appear that the United States went to war for an inadequate cause. If the German propagandists at any time make you cherish any such misgivings, permit us to commend to your perusal the address of Baron Moncheur of the Belgian commission to President "Wilson. If any spiritual descendant of Patrick Henry and Samuel Adams, of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, of the men who fought the Civil war that the union might be preserved and slavery forever ended, can read that address without feeling towards Germany a burning indignation, without the conviction that the world must redress the great wrong done the Belgian people, then Americanism has ceased to be an Ideal, and has become only a grubbing for dollars. The greatest sin of all modern hls-, tory has been perpetrated upon Bel-glum by Germany.

If there is such a thing as Christian brotherhood, then a wrong done to even the weakest is a wrong done to all. The United States could blind its eyes to what has happened in Belgium only -at the cost of beccming in effect a partner with Germany in all the utter barbarity inflicted upon that unhappy nation. A BAD 'OUTLOOK Following the coldest winter Europe has known for years, there comes now the dryest spring. All European crops are suffering. But the drought seems to have been, most severe in Germany.

In England rain came in time to tave the wheat, most of which is fall sown. In Germany, however, the drought caught the youns grain, end has inflicted damage that may prove irreparabl3 German harvests have been too often reported failures, and too often te German people have been able one vtsitor 'hefe last' night- "yhis hen- tne calm thoroughness of -a seems- to be a very popular Her emancipation 'from old fashioned place. I see, that the first thing for home restraints Is not a udden one, me to do after breakast is to nail and is therefore the more plausible. She Cfter at 1790 feet. The drill raay eent deep ln hope of finding oil.

Patterson No. 6 ia spudding with National machine. No. 7 same lease, is assembling company tools and will drilling In a short time. Harter No.

3 la rigging up and will be drilling in a day or two. No. I and 2 are both on the pump. Three of the five Patterson walla are flowing. Two are on the pump.

Martin No. 1 is drilling at 2300 feet. Minor No. 9 is getting ready with a National machine and expect to start drilling Friday or Saturday. The Empire has McCoy 1 down past the 3109.

foot mark and drying. McCoy No. 2 la pumping. Sam company, Graves, hsa been having considerable grief of lata. Cav iflgs caught the tools and they hava been trying to get them out for several days.

Same company is drilling Eckle No. 1. at about 2.000 feet. The Guarantee people expect to reach the sand by the last of lha week. Location, Morrison leaae, 4-29-4.

Tha Wilkle well No. 2, Just eaat the city, has been cleaning out for two or three, days. Cavings fcava been t4 at about the level. The Empire company will start lh drill on Eider No. 5 on.

They putting a Htar rfg on thl on. i. 2, and 4 are on th pump. Wilford No. 2 Is drilling again after delay caused by pulling off crown blocks.

Gold JJollar and I.ucky Eight both drilling on Piper, two miles wtit town. Oklahoma Outlines striving for. and at an age when the deeper sand. The produc- THE MEASURE America has just finished raising a popular Liberty loan subscription of $2,000,000,000. Due to our experience, we have a greater respect for that sum than ever -before.

We realize that to secure it almost everyone must contribute. Two billion dollars is the amount set by experts as the direct cost of the liquor, traffic 'each year in thje United States. The amount spent directly for liquor Is in itself sufficiently staggering, but that is only part of the price society pays. There is the economic loss due to drunkenness, and the diseases of drink; there is the cost of jails and courts and police and asylums and charitable institutions for the wreckage of drink. And this amounts to an even greater sum than the direct cost of the traffic.

The annual wastage of drink would have subscribed every dollar of the Liberty loan twice over. Is the nation economically justified in maintaining such a waste? WHERE WE'RE PREPARED America needs 35,000 motor trucks for the army in France. Bids just submitted show that many times that number of trucks can be furnished by the first of the year. Three separate concerns agree to supply the entire number asked. In land transportation not even Germany is" better prepared tot war than the United States.

We can, on land, transport any number of troops that can be raised. And a nation of which that can be. said can soon make good its deficiencies in other Automobile factories can without great dificulty or delay be transformed into airplane factories. Men skilled in automobile and railway con- i etruction can without much trouble be transformed into ship builders. The 30,000 airplanes expected of America within the next year, and the 4,000,000.

tons or so of new shipping, can be delivered. All that ia required is a certain rearrangement of our in-! dustnes. a certain curtailment for a time in our domestic supply of certain articles. Oklahoma can cast no rocks at Missouri. She, too, owns a apology.

i Cotton gambling has now been stopped in England. 13 this war go ing to end gambling? If tne kaiser ever gets nis nanas on that German-American sailor who spotted that last U-boat Greece has expelled a number of King 'Tino's followers. He will have company in his Berlin exile. Germany is suffering a far worse drought even than Kansas' winter drought. It' may end the war.

Yale has a proud commencement record this One thiid of her graduates are already in khaki. The Germans are sending booze to Russia. They know what it is that most easily makes a fool of a man. ln order to save food on its diners, the serves "war portions" smaller portions, littler prices. Jules Cambon says America's entrance into the war has caused uneasiness in Germany.

If it hasn't, it will. Iowa's pride as the birthplace of Hoover has just suffered a sayere Jolt. Jim Reed of Missouri was also born in Iowa. The people should redouble their demand for food controk The opposition In the senate is beginning to wobble. Flour at Minneapolis dropped 50 cents the( other day, in spite of the fact that the food control bill hasn't yet passed.

It's too bad automobiles can't fly. American manufacturers could supply several times the required 30,000 airplanes by next year. The trouble is, qur iood supply must be large enough to feed not only America and our allies, but the U-boats as well. Even the threat of government control has sent prices down. But they'll leap up again unless the senate makes the threat good.

Senator Borah joins the food control opposition, finding the measure "Unconstitutional." How much knavery has that word covered! Kansas merchants think we can't win the war without breaking the nine hour law. And would it be too dangerous even to try it out? Billy Sunday hit his enemies, the hardest Jolt they have ever suffered when he gave away for war work his entire $116,000 collection in New York. The training of America's new army may be postponed by failure to build cantonments. Why not requisition the big summer resort hotels for "barracks? One of the Y. M.

CL activities at the front will be the support of a number of theatrical stock companies. Clean plays will keep the men from bad ones. St. Louis is discovering that its devotion to boore may cost it big. It is in danger of losing Jefferson Barracks and the United B-iies quartermaster's depot.

i boys are just finishing their education. His parents live at Konawa, Okla-on a farm, from which he went into business for himself when buf 16 years old. He has had considerable experl- en" stands the oil game about as well as any well-read oil man. He has been employed In the office J0f this year; and the (JuSf Refining of the Empire Gas Fuel company of, company is still negotiating for 100 Augusta some time, and says he has no 'miles of 6-inch pipe for shipment into intention of Quitting a good thing just the southwest. Each of these contracts because be was lucky once.

He be-jcaHs for over 5.000 tons. Independent lieves in conservative investment, in i manufacturers are quoting prices from spite of the fact that he put all he to $12 per ton above the official Into this property at a time when it I price of the National Tube which seemed he had no chance of winning! made no change Jn its base price when Kansas and Oklahoma. TO 90 Healdton Curbing (Texas Co.) Ccrsicana Corsicana Klectria Henryetta Caddo Caldo 33) Caddo De SUa Canada Pennsylvania Merct-r black) I.8.", 1 70 5 1.70 1.70 1.90 1.80 1.75 1.80 2.23 $.10 4 Newcastle 2.23 Corning 2.40 North 1.S8 South Lima 1.S8 Wooster 2. 10 Indiana i Princeton ,4 i 92 Somerset Ragland 1 .09 Illinois 1.92 24-28-1 west, and will put the drill uiyn ii mai luvHiion is reporieu nave been on a daily average of but from two to three barrels. Bay SO Mlies of Pipe oil interest in the central west An has placed a contract for 50 miles of 12.inch pips with rjtlflburn jmm for ehipm5nt over the last half independent manufacturers -put out of the American Steel Wirs and some of the fabricating Uy.

Jn the district tbe car supply Is only $0 to 70 normal. per cent of FROSI F.VID, OKM. Several days ago one of t.h tt wells on the Hoy farm encountered very strong vein of gaa which ha ben escaping for several days and net under control. The volume of Is not so strong as when tb and waa first struck, but mo much gas 1 cajin L. 1 whn lh, im f'ft avs.

The Herrington welt Wing pany located In Enid. I Jllrick. president the corrpany, -mho resides anything out or it. He has been in litigation a year and -new cards, a half over the property, and the case There is a great scarcity of seml-fln-is not yet settled, though he has won', Jshed steel, and as a result some tt the two cases and his chances are so iavor-jmuis able that the sale was closed on the company boards over that hole ih the floor. So jit was you, Unc' Billy Possum, whc kicked that nest-egg out.

Found it a little hard, for your teeth, didn't you? Lost your temper and kicked it out, didn't That was foolish. Unc Billy, very foolish, indeed. Never lose your temper over trifles. Never lose i it anyway, but especially never lose it over such a trifle as a little ''disappointment. It doesn't pay.

Now I wonder what I better do with you." All this time Unc Billy hadn't moved. Of course he couldn't under- stand what Farmer Brown's Boy was saying. Nor could he see what Farmer Brown's Boy was doing, so he held his breath and hoped and hoped Jthat he hadn't been discovered. And perhaps he wouldn't have been but for the telltale nest-egg on the floor. That was the cause of all his troubles.

First, it had angered Jimmy Skunk because, as you remember, it had fallen on Jimmy's head. Then it had led Farmer Brown's Boy to look in all the nests. It had seemer a trifle, kicking that egg out of that nest, but see what the results were. Truly little things often are not so little as they seem. The Next Story: Unc' Billy Possum Tries His Old Trick.

(Copyright, 1917. by T. W. Burgess) HIGHBROWS Prom Morn To noon he fell, from noon to dewey eve A summer's day: and with the setting sun Dropped from the zenith like a falling star. Milton.

UNCLE WALT HAPPV A.VTHOW. 1 know not how the weather man may run his old machine. I'll be strength of former decisions. snops or the American Bridge company He has already made a purchase of! have been obliged to reduce out pur. Butler county acreage near the Prairie -Seme of the shops of the Utter corn-Oil Gas well on the Wilson farm jpany may have to close unless there is west and south of the Weaver-Smith a radical change in the n-ar well, and if he can acquire more acre-; Already acme mr-ioye have been laid age near that just bought, he and his toff temporarily.

A scarcity of steel I associates intend drilling a test well, jdue to the Inability of the railroads Mr. Zingery made a net profit of handle coke and other fuel corapetent- Ten-yr-aco item In Maskc Pho-ni: Bandy Grtfn, a full blooded Creek Indian of EufaU, come to Muekogee and becom homecirk that be breaks down and crlea in Ih trtl- Polkerw'-ra attempt to eon9l him. but all be will say ia "tot, many white people in this country. JJrtlvilI Examiner: Now bayon- ncarly 2.000 per cent on his investment for he only paid $5,000 for the property including attorney's fees. FROM ALVA.

OKLA. At the last report the Cosdon well is down about three thousand feet They "expect to begin putting In the six-inch casing from now on and kep on gofng. AT STROUD. OKLA. The Oklahoma National Gas company is drimng at 1.900 feet on the Mollle farm, in the northwest ornerof the southwest of the northwest of 22-17-1.

FROM HLACKWEI.L, OKLA. as.Pavld and William. BUckwell The Southwestern Oil company well by tfc Quad ran! company ta an in-on the Mooney farm, the northwest ftercstirg test to a large numfcr quarter of section 17-28-1 east, was re-J caa tb headquarters this com- ported making between and SCO barrels Monday. happy as I can. and keep my mind Nan Westland June E'rkle serene.

Man cannot change the course I Jeffrey Arnold Frank Mills of things by looking glum all day, so Kathleen May Evelyn Greeley he is wise whd whoops and sings, and! Ben George MacQuarrie says. "Hip, Hip. Horray. Whene'er I Judge Endicott. Charles am inclined to whine, I murmur to my Madge Endicott Neebit soul.

"No fierce protesting words ofi mine "will lift things from the hole, The weather sharp will not dispel th PC 1 1 11 TT Tl gray clouds overhead, because I stand LVailbclb Ut C1Ub around and yell, and wish that I were dead. So let the clouds, all wet and! "Some girls ln this town." declares gray, continue to collect; I still shall (the label Star, "require a new beau cry Hip, Hip, Horray, or words to that every few eights, or 1 they christen effect." Thus, as I go about my blx.the town a dead one and yearn for I cheer up other gents; they say. Great something exciting to bapien.V make hav Wen Invented, but It out r- that thy will beeom vry popular with Kir BI1L CTKn leader; Most anybody en mur nic things, but rw popi liv they talk Tor.kawa News; German tr a tmg and tUck Freneh and family mtm down Iron HaKMnton, Kan. Arapaho Bj Oar wbt ttop 11. bttr ttpon4.

fhrn sad and grain 1 fin. WWU ed tfc trw. ca gt bIovk with a abort trw. Oki5 A Kuu dltr wa mad to vir4-t hi uttfarxa and peteliely khr tb AmttUta fk, muppoto thr mto no ttomm or tj-phvn tn tb wfer Uttn or tstor fitting jmnirnhmnt wouH hat bn mtd ovt to Tst4 Wott4; Utton Kpponkrr MfosfifM tb tbat mho 1 writ hooic hr f.hm will wrtt no tU. All ot whirs big point mnl.

Alv. rtotrj who ihfotm 4o It. won4mr wbV tnrpU4 tho Ufm, light baJ.p!kg,'; tight kHsg ar on a pmr wnh i 55 tfc ttttu Ckk, Mr HT--Sc 41 iht to tt ffi4 of lm wit. ttt to 41 tkat fc a fcafcn mtittM. 5ti fcrr rmr tlg Mo po-ot mhi4 J5jickwf.I, fr Arleft.

wot Ka to dvatac othor war if 'Hmt whito potriom 3fegia oi tb ttri 4Uekt- not. flty afirt tfetir rrtr. tfc Arool4 ca4 tt tm Hut ttt H'W-. Th NationaPUnion Oi! and Gaa com-; at Ardmore. i slaying tn Enid toJ pany on the Nix farm, the south week, giving him prmnl attention quarter of ction 1S-2I-1 east, ba the dtatl of th drslJiug.

Thl rom-drilled 22 feet deeper Into th pay, pany la tow drilling around ft. sand, striking another oil sand ard which I quit Ja to th pmf sand the well flowed Saturday twtt and picked up at th Hoy wIt one each Sunday and Monday. Twoj xh -JriJiSog ha bn dly4 tot hundred barrel oil wer saved lnj.i, tfc well an hocr. It I reported. Monday.

A 4tm4 by th p-tro a resalt the company has dvscd the? When tfey reached a dpth price of tmkv ft th notary drtlt tia hvm Palulh-Oklahom tompmnr K. 4 on fastesd in tfc fcS. mi w-th W. F. Wolf farm, the outlw-t ouy try it to rtmov tk, ohnruttion qoarter of section -2l-l t.

1 flw- iAr mr9 hftpsssg drtJJ rtvn4. IL at 2.S feet. Ori the Barrttt farm. tfe tn th eart half e.f tb nrtbwt rterj htn of f. tb drr.r in hm.

Jt i tfe tany. well ha a dty yrodactten ttt frf th Bf9 WEy sw 1 ja 4 lt at ihim si s4 aNntt have ah-at down tb w.lt. tfe Uorl nr thl, tt. farm, th of Ion t. A wk ag AT IKil f.LA.

KAXMf tarda an ot tt town ypr had Tfc Ohio nt in port from tt torrfpfnAnt tfc at wl? W46day. Uitytr I Iw tboscand feel ef tl.l atasdisg la -If-4, fft4l fef ry Isfe tb bol, ltl.tKls 0f eil at bi! rrr Mid -Co rotRpAJsy. "ta r-trt pA. 4 wl drilled 4pr. vmd tb Lrr Lr Knsi 9 farm, th aatf act jrartr metis t-Jf-t.

Tki Voh liko gm4 i Scott, how blithe he Is." and borrow torty cents. ome droop ana mope be- cause they think our war with Kaiser Bill will put the country on the blink and all fair prospects kilL But mop- Ing will not help to slay a alngl foe, that flat: hr wur. cry. THp. Hip.

liAM -a aa lat ar. a IV Horray, and let it go at that. ABE MARTIN Ther never vti much a farm wher ther wum't haatlin' wife. Loaf In around worryin about th gov- ernment must be healthy. know a feller that' been doln It fr forty yeats.

an look good fr forty more The Falina Journal suggest a tar lums wouia euner anv mem out or rIe a whaling big revenue. fKOlI Ol lilt Jl'l l.r..!lr tap a thorooRh ln the League to En- force PVace. but. holding that this 1 a tlm to fight, not talk. naa dccMned an InvltatJon to make a speaking tour In the, league William Allen Wtite r-U th.ca of Bristow In a nutshell when fc aays: -So long a hi ldeal to work wp ntlmnt that will raak ta flunk tit of th war and not fight out.

helpinr ti German army In kl.

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About The Wichita Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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