The Globe Store

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Globe Store tain to his present high position Inn i . EVIDENCE army circles. Is so well known that ADVERTISEMENTS SHOWS It needs no comment. CLASSIFIED s Alexander Brodie, for thirty years 1 CTASSTFTED VERTTfiEMEMTS PAYABLE IN A I VANCE an Arizona frontiersman, after having ALL All been twice chosen as governor of that territory. Is at presen i occupying an TO BE important government position. FOIt RENT. ftvenoom brick cot- U,PI Llewellyn became district attorney tage with modern conveniences, elo' of New Mexico. In II. H. Tllton. room 19. Grant bldg. Sherman Hell has played a conspic- five-roo- m brick uous part In the affairs of Colorado. FOR RENT A house, with bath and cellar, stab Id A ROUGH J. H. McCllntock Is the present Store PERSONAL PROPERTY IOAXS... RIDER Globe connection, 1118 S. Ar- The and in postmaster at Phoenix. A. T. barns Lieutenant Hynning Is at the head no street. al of the Arlaona rangers. Money to Loan FOR RENT Furnished rooms for There are many others of the fa- On Furniture. Pianos, Organs. Horses, tight housekeeping. 30 N. Arno. mSj) mous In positions. Wagons and other Chattels: also on T- command lesser receipts, as FOR REN- Nicely furnished front Of the eastern contingent which salaries and warehouse room. Call at 22T, North Walter st President Has Taken Good went to the low as $10.00 ntid as high as 1200.00. swell ranks of this, the Loans are quickly made and strictly F (i R R E N T- - Newly furnished most talked about and unique military private. month to one 0U organization Time: One room, bath, all conveniences, 110, ever recruited within the year given. Goods to remain In your month. Hoard if desired. 803 N. Care oí His Comrades. borders of the United States, may be possession. Our rates are reasonable. street. mentioned men who have, made for Call and see us before borrowing. Fourth themselves a name familiar in athleti- Steamshln tickets to and from all FOR RENT New house, modern cs, In nnrts of the world. conveniences! "B09 S. Walter at. mJl society and the world of THE HOUSEHOLD LOAN CO.. finance. -- house- JUST A Rooms 3 nd 4. Grant Bids. FOR RENT. Rooms for FEW OF THE JOBS Wrenn, the Harvard quarterback. Is PRIVATE OFFICES. keeping, 584 W. Railroad avenue. m:il the twice champion player of tennis OPEN EVENINGS. FOR RUNT. New four-roo- m rouse VETERANS HAVE LANDED America. Dudley Dean. Craig Wads-wort- h, 305 Weal Railroad Avenue. With bath and electric lights. Corner Woodbury Kane, Horace Dev-ereau- High and Iron. If John Oreenway, Dave Good- JFO RESALE.. rich and a host of others are entitled FOIt SALE.--Snilt- h-I rentier type FOR RENT Four rooms for ilgnt Did it pay to be a rough rider? to recognition. They are for the most writer No. 1. Also line shotgun. 32? housekeeping; two rooms each. 1207 West Coal. m"0 S. Second st. tf When Captain Frank Frantz was part treading the paths of peace. NT appointed governor of Each, however, is more than proud FOR SALE. furnishings of FOR-ItE- Good office room: Oklahoma at a that is to wear Entire salary he entitled the rough four-roo- house, party leaving city. modern conveniences. New Grant of $3.000 a year, people of th rider emblem. building. Apply Moon's studio, tf territory began to believe that it did. Not invalids. 323 West Coal. mSO When Charlie Hunter, president of FOR SALE. ttdéboards, sewing FOR RENT Brick house with Roi-.- bath at 207 N. Fifth st. Maypard the National Rough Riders' associa- FINDS SKELETON OF GIANT machines, cheap. 4. Grunt tion, was named as clerk of the fed- Bldg. tf tlunsul. tf eral court at Oklahoma Cltv, a po- FOR sale. Second hand top bug- - FOR RENT Furnished room, mod- sition that curries with it fees amount- gy 211 Walnut. ern. 724 S. Second st. tf ing to and harness. North more than $10,000 a year, SAN harness, FOR RENT Two houses; straightened up FOR HALE Buggy and furnished. Auto, phone 013 or call and were 1009 N. Eighth willing to sunfesF that he was indeed Street, at 1101 S. Fourth st. tf fortúnate who followed Lieutenant FOIt SALE First class restaurant FOR RENT To persons wishing Colonel Roosevelt up San Juan hill in and lunch room opposite depot, doing private rooms with hoard. The ele- the lace of Spanish bullets, says the good business. Good reason for gant residence of Nathan Rarth. 422 Kansas City Journal. selling. Address ft. D. Journal. a3 North Sixth street, has been neatly Pirante M. D. G.iylord, well min- furnished and started as a first-cla- ss and Hunter are not the only the known FOR SALIO Cheap, range, heater, private boarding and rooming house. ones who profited by the Cuban cam- ing man. is In town with a story of folding bed and two large rugs. 221 Large airy rooms, reception hall and paign, however. The records of the the location of some ancient Spanish a Edith . m30 parlors, double porches, large grounds. Rough Kiders' Association show that workings in Hie San Andreas moun- you want Ph on efi 3 8 . Ter ins reaaonrble. t f tains, the discovery of skele- FOR SALIO Anything of the eighty members of that famous and the way riding FOR RENT New four-roo- m eat ton of in one of them, says in of teams, mules, horses, regiment now living In Oklahoma and a man or driving horses. Inquire of C. W. tage. 412 W. Lead avenue. Indian Territory, more 2(1 the HI Paso Herald. He has photo- than per Hunter, Albuquerque Carriage Co., FOR RENT Furnished rooms bv Bent are at present holding federal graphs of the mines, showing all that .oner and Tijeras road. the day. week or positions. ho claims. First street month, also rooms two lots, una for light housekeeping. Mrs. Eva Had the question of Mr. Oaylord and associates discov- FOR SALE Cheap, Flaming. 113 whether It paid new improvements. West Lead ave. tf to be a rough rider put to ered these claims In Ash canyon in house tent and RIÓ been the Parea addition. Address T. C. Jour- FOR NT Apartments In Park regiment when it Mon-tau- k the San Andreas, and have been blast- View Terrace, eight first landed at nal. rooms eacn, mod- Point, where the sick and ing out the openings. He declares ern equipment throughout. H. H. Til-to- n, wounded suffered for the lack of al that the former operators sealed the FOR SALE -- Four good nativ1 room lj,(l ra nt block. most everything, the answer probably openings up, after working them, by lionas, well broken to harness and BAK FRIES. mixing pulverized lime plas- phone would have been in the negative. But rock and saddle. Inquire of Colorado BREAD, PI IOS ÁND tering it In 92-- CAKE8 De- time has erased the memory of those over the openings the livered to any part of the city, wed- hardships, and with the good fortunes form of cement. It is impossible to lo- FOR SALE Elegant new furniture, ding cakes a specialty: satisfaction unci advancement of the regiment's cate the openings, he declares, except corner S, Edith and Haaeldlne aye, tf guaranteed. S. N. Balling. Pioneer from the appearance of llakerv. 207 South First leader has come a turn In the affairs smoked the bug-harne- street. walls of the canyon above. In this FOR SALIO Good rubber tire of the men who stood ready to do gy and TOS S. Edith st. m31 BUSINESS OPPOHTI MTIES. and dare at his command. manner he and his associates have lo- SALE. Eight-roo- m brick OTOCK COMPANIES Incorporated. In Oklahoma and Indian Territory cated several and every time a blast FOR you was applied It hous all modern Improvements with If have stocks or bonds for sale today, it is looked upon as a good opened an ancient me try you. mine. one of It i ts, for 11,0,00. Inquire city let and sell them for thing to have been a member of the In them. had been three Kellogg, - sloped out a height 300 feel Market into George If. broker, 345 Eili- famous regiment. And that President for of cott Square. Hufl'.ilo. Kooscvelt has kept a watchful eye on and in some of them the ancient POR salió.- - A good medium site the members of his rough Is a mines had been tunneled for over 400 Iron safe. O. W. Strong's Sons. riders feet. PROFESSIONAL. fact evidenced by the recent and im- POR SALE Furniture, sewing ma-Roo- m portant appointments of The canyon walls are from 1,000 4, build-i- n ATTORNEYS. its members to chines, cheap. Grant to federal positions of honor and good 3.000 feet high, he says, and in Ing. 17 I! W. 1. BRYAN remuneration. many Instances the openings are lo- Attorney at Law. The cated one above the other. Ore found FOR SALIO OR EXCHANGE For Office In First National bank build-iQ- g. governorship of Oklahoma was v ,M. practically thrust upon Captain on the ground outside the workings city or ranch property, a ii 'w furnish- Albuoueroue. 12 Rest location in Frantz. He was never an office seek- assays from ounces to 28 ounces In ed rooming house. PHYSICIANS. silver, two None the city. Address F. J. this office, tf er, and It was with a great deal of re- - with ounces of gold.
Recommended publications
  • THE ARIZONA ROUGH RIDERS by Harlan C. Herner a Thesis
    The Arizona rough riders Item Type text; Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Herner, Charles Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 04/10/2021 02:07:43 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/551769 THE ARIZONA ROUGH RIDERS b y Harlan C. Herner A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS In the Graduate College THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA 1965 STATEMENT BY AUTHOR This thesis has been submitted in partial fulfillment of require­ ments for an advanced degree at the University of Arizona and is deposited in the University Library to be made available to borrowers under the rules of the Library. Brief quotations from this thesis are allowable without special permission, provided that accurate acknowledgment of source is made. Requests for permission for extended quotation from or reproduction of this manuscript in whole or in part may be granted by the head of the major department or the dean of the Graduate College when in his judgment the proposed use of this material is in the interests of scholarship. In all other instances, however, permission must be obtained from the author. SIGNED: MsA* J'73^, APPROVAL BY THESIS DIRECTOR This thesis has been approved on the date shown below: G > Harwood P.
    [Show full text]
  • Congressional Record-Senate. January 29
    1074 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE. JANUARY 29, CONFffiMATIONS. Roger M. Bridgman, to be postmaster at Ridgewood, in the Executive norninattons confirmed by the Senate Janum-y 28, 1902. county of Bergen and State of New Jersey. Charles J. McGill, to be postmaster at Dawson, in the county of CONSUL. Fayette and State of Pennsylvania. Alphonse J. Lespinasse, of New York, to be consul of the Edwin Price, to be postmaster at Grand Junction, in the county United States at Tuxpan, Mexico. of Mesa and State of Colorado. UNITED STATES ATTORNEYS. James Harris, to be postmaster at Englewood, in the county of Abram 1\I. Tillman, of Tennessee, to be United States attorney Bergen and State of New Jersey. • for the middle district of Tennessee. Robert D. Peck, to be postmaster at Lock Haven1 in the county William Warner, of Missouri, to be United States attorney for of Clinton and State of Pennsylvania. the western district of Missouri. W. Day Wllson, to be postmaster at Clarion, in the county of Robert V. Cozier, of Idaho, to be United States attorney for the Clarion and State of Pennsylvania. district of Idaho. Benjamin B. Heywood, o~~ be United States marshal SENATE. for the district of Utah. WEDNESDAY, January 29, 1902. Littleton S. Crum, of Kansas, to be United States marshal for Prayer by Rev. HENRY N. CoUDEN, Chaplain of the House of the district of Kansas. Representatives. John W. Overall, of Tennessee, to be United States marshal for The Secretaryproceede·d to read the Journal of yesterday's pro- the middle district of Tennessee.
    [Show full text]
  • The Texas Star
    The Texas Star Newsletter for the Texican Rangers A Publication of the Texican Rangers An Authentic Cowboy Action Shooting Club That Treasures & Respects the Cowboy Tradition SASS Affiliated PO Box 782261 January 2018 San Antonio, TX 78278-2261 Officers Words from the President President A.D. Texaz 210-862-7464 [email protected] Vice President We had a cold start to our first match for Col. Callan January. We had 47 shooters on Saturday and 325-446-7632 12 on Sunday. With temperatures in the 20’s [email protected] at the start of the match this was a good turnout on Saturday. Secretary Thank you to all who came out to help set up the range for our first shoot. This club Tombstone Mary could not continue without all your support 210-262-7464 and help. [email protected] Comancheria Days our SASS Texas State Championship will be here before you know Treasurer it. I will serve as your Match Director and General Burleson Newt Ritter will be our Assistant Match Director. If you have already registered 210-912-7908 thanks if not please do so as soon as possible. [email protected] We have 215 registered shooters and our maximum is 285. Get your application and Range Master check to Tombstone Mary before we fill up. Colorado Horseshoe We have several workdays planned to get 719-231-6190 the range ready for our annual match. Please consider attending to help us get things done [email protected] before April. Volunteers are needed for several positions Communications for Comancheria Days.
    [Show full text]
  • Rough Riders by Theodore Roosevelt</H1>
    Rough Riders by Theodore Roosevelt Rough Riders by Theodore Roosevelt Produced by Dagny Wilson THE ROUGH RIDERS BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT 1899 ON BEHALF OF THE ROUGH RIDERS I DEDICATE THIS BOOK TO THE OFFICERS AND MEN OF THE FIVE REGULAR REGIMENTS WHICH TOGETHER WITH MINE MADE UP THE CAVALRY DIVISION AT SANTIAGO I page 1 / 223 RAISING THE REGIMENT During the year preceding the outbreak of the Spanish War I was Assistant Secretary of the Navy. While my party was in opposition, I had preached, with all the fervor and zeal I possessed, our duty to intervene in Cuba, and to take this opportunity of driving the Spaniard from the Western World. Now that my party had come to power, I felt it incumbent on me, by word and deed, to do all I could to secure the carrying out of the policy in which I so heartily believed; and from the beginning I had determined that, if a war came, somehow or other, I was going to the front. Meanwhile, there was any amount of work at hand in getting ready the navy, and to this I devoted myself. Naturally, when one is intensely interested in a certain cause, the tendency is to associate particularly with those who take the same view. A large number of my friends felt very differently from the way I felt, and looked upon the possibility of war with sincere horror. But I found plenty of sympathizers, especially in the navy, the army, and the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs. Commodore Dewey, Captain Evans, Captain Brownson, Captain Davis--with these and the various other naval officers on duty at Washington I used to hold long consultations, during which we went over and over, not only every question of naval administration, but specifically everything necessary to do in order to put the navy in trim to strike quick and page 2 / 223 hard if, as we believed would be the case, we went to war with Spain.
    [Show full text]
  • Tennis in Colorado
    Year 32, Issue 5 The Official Publication OfT ennis Lovers Est. 1976 WINTER 08/09 FALL 2008 From what we get, we can make a living; what we give, however, makes a life. Arthur Ashe Celebrating the true heroes of tennis USTA COLORADO Gates Tennis Center 3300 E Bayaud Ave, Suite 201 Denver, CO 80209 303.695.4116 PAG E 2 COLORADO TENNIS WINTER 2008/2009 VOTED THE #3 BEST TENNIS RESORT IN AMERICA BY TENNIS MAGAZINE TENNIS CAMPS AT THE BROA DMOOR The Broadmoor Staff has been rated as the #1 teaching staff in the country by Tennis Magazine for eight years running. Join us for one of our award-winning camps this winter or spring on our newly renovated courts! If weather is inclement, camps are held in our indoor heated bubble through April. Fall & Winter Camp Dates: Date: Camp Level: Dec 28-30 Professional Staff Camp for 3.0-4.0’s Mixed Doubles “New Year’s Weekend” Feb 13-15 3.5 – 4.0 Mixed Doubles “Valentine’s Weekend” Feb 20-22 3.5 – 4.0 Women’s w/ “Mental Toughness” Clinic Mar 13-15 3.5 – 4.0 Coed Mar 27-29 3.0 – 4.0 Coed “Broadmoor’s Weekend of Jazz” May 22-24 3.5 – 4.0 Coed “Dennis Ralston Premier” Camp May 29 – 31 All Levels “Dennis Ralston Premier” Camp Tennis Camps Include: • 4:1 student/pro (players are grouped with others of their level) • Camp tennis bag, notebook and gift • Intensive instruction and supervised match play • Complimentary court time and match arranging • Special package rates with luxurious Broadmoor room included or commuter rate available SPRING TEAM CAMPS Plan your tennis team getaway to The Broadmoor now! These three-day, two-night weekends are still available for a private team camp: January 9 – 11, April 10 – 12, May 1 – 3.
    [Show full text]
  • 'INTRODUCTORY Xix City Governments Were at Once Organized
    'INTRODUCTORY xix City governments were at once organized, and 'while these had no real authority, according to the strict letter of the law, yet they were obeyed and proved as useful 'and efficient a means of maintain­ ing order as were the wholly self-constituted governments of the New .England Puritans. ' ) The Organic Act, legally establishing Oklahoma Territory and pro­ viding a for;m of government became a law on May 2, 1890. Power was given the president to appoint the governor and the secretll.ry, and the jUQges of the supreme court, The governor was given the power to appoint all other executive officials. The legislature consisted of a council of thirteen members and a house of representatives of twerity- . six. The supreme court judges acted also as district judges, and as the territory grew in size and population, the number of these judges was increased from three to five and then to seven. ' Ueorge W. Steele of Indiana became the first territorial governor, May 22, 1890. Guthrie was designated as the temporary capital and remained so until June 11, 1911, when it was moved to Oklahoma City by referendum vote of the citizens. The election was held invalid by the State Supreme Court on a defect in the bill, but Governor Haskell called a special session of the legislature, which body located the capital at Oklahoma City, December 29th by more than a two-thirds majority vote. After being in office a year and a half Governor Steele resigned and on October 18, 1891, Judge A. J. Seay, a supreme court judge of the territory was named to succeed him.
    [Show full text]
  • Ally, the Okla- Homa Story, (University of Oklahoma Press 1978), and Oklahoma: a History of Five Centuries (University of Oklahoma Press 1989)
    Oklahoma History 750 The following information was excerpted from the work of Arrell Morgan Gibson, specifically, The Okla- homa Story, (University of Oklahoma Press 1978), and Oklahoma: A History of Five Centuries (University of Oklahoma Press 1989). Oklahoma: A History of the Sooner State (University of Oklahoma Press 1964) by Edwin C. McReynolds was also used, along with Muriel Wright’s A Guide to the Indian Tribes of Oklahoma (University of Oklahoma Press 1951), and Don G. Wyckoff’s Oklahoma Archeology: A 1981 Perspective (Uni- versity of Oklahoma, Archeological Survey 1981). • Additional information was provided by Jenk Jones Jr., Tulsa • David Hampton, Tulsa • Office of Archives and Records, Oklahoma Department of Librar- ies • Oklahoma Historical Society. Guide to Oklahoma Museums by David C. Hunt (University of Oklahoma Press, 1981) was used as a reference. 751 A Brief History of Oklahoma The Prehistoric Age Substantial evidence exists to demonstrate the first people were in Oklahoma approximately 11,000 years ago and more than 550 generations of Native Americans have lived here. More than 10,000 prehistoric sites are recorded for the state, and they are estimated to represent about 10 percent of the actual number, according to archaeologist Don G. Wyckoff. Some of these sites pertain to the lives of Oklahoma’s original settlers—the Wichita and Caddo, and perhaps such relative latecomers as the Kiowa Apache, Osage, Kiowa, and Comanche. All of these sites comprise an invaluable resource for learning about Oklahoma’s remarkable and diverse The Clovis people lived Native American heritage. in Oklahoma at the Given the distribution and ages of studies sites, Okla- homa was widely inhabited during prehistory.
    [Show full text]
  • From Scouts to Soldiers: the Evolution of Indian Roles in the U.S
    Georgia Southern University Digital Commons@Georgia Southern Electronic Theses and Dissertations Graduate Studies, Jack N. Averitt College of Summer 2013 From Scouts to Soldiers: The Evolution of Indian Roles in the U.S. Military, 1860-1945 James C. Walker Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/etd Part of the Indigenous Studies Commons, and the Military History Commons Recommended Citation Walker, James C., "From Scouts to Soldiers: The Evolution of Indian Roles in the U.S. Military, 1860-1945" (2013). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 860. https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/etd/860 This thesis (open access) is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate Studies, Jack N. Averitt College of at Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FROM SCOUTS TO SOLDIERS: THE EVOLUTION OF INDIAN ROLES IN THE U.S. MILITARY, 1860-1945 by JAMES C. WALKER ABSTRACT The eighty-six years from 1860-1945 was a momentous one in American Indian history. During this period, the United States fully settled the western portion of the continent. As time went on, the United States ceased its wars against Indian tribes and began to deal with them as potential parts of American society. Within the military, this can be seen in the gradual change in Indian roles from mostly ad hoc forces of scouts and home guards to regular soldiers whose recruitment was as much a part of the United States’ war plans as that of any other group.
    [Show full text]
  • Torrent Download the Roughriders Movie Ruff Ryders
    torrent download the roughriders movie Ruff Ryders. Founded by siblings Darrin “Dee” Dean, Joaquin “Waah” Dean and Chivon Dean, Ruff Ryders arose from the gritty streets of the South Bronx in the late 1998s, starting as an artist management firm, and went on to one of hip-hop’s most iconic dynasties. With the sound mostly backed by famed producer Swizz Beatz , who is also their nephew, the independent record label was an unstoppable force on the charts at the turn of the millennium. Featured artists included DMX and The Lox, revered lyricists in their own right, and Ruff Ryders official first lady, Eve. Aside from the solo releases from affiliated artists, Ruff Ryders released the popular Ryde or Die compilation series (three volumes from 1999 to 2005). Rebranding as Ruff Ryders Indy in 2010, the multi-million dollar empire has since evolved to encompass film, lifestyle, and philanthropy. BET presents “Ruff Ryders Chronicles” is a five part docu-series that aired in August 2020 and examines the hip-hop legacy of the music label’s rise to superstardom and features interviews from many of the artists on its roster. Ninden. 21 Day Fix® creator Autumn Calabrese takes her simple color-coded container system for measuring perfect portions and applies it to 101 of her favorite family recipes to give you Fixate, a delicious approach to healthy weight loss. So you're not just eating tasty, healthy foods-you're eating just the right amount. Any Beachbody program. Getting Started Meet Your Trainer Meal Prep & Containers Results The Workouts FAQ Community.
    [Show full text]
  • Indian Territory and the Laws of Tory Was Ready for Statehood
    'J'tlli TULSA 1'tUHUNE, TULSA, OKLAHOMA 7 Territory folks ... Continued from page 6 schools were not open to noncitizen children, and non­ citizens bad no voice in government. ·until 1906. A shrewd political leader he reduced the bitter factionalism among territoriai'Republicans. The start of the avalanche which would destroy the Indian governments came in 1871 when Congr~ss . Al_though_supported by Flynn's group, he was impar­ passed a bill which stated: " Hereafter, no Indtan bal m makt!lg app<;~intments and in party contests. nation or tribe within the territory of the United States . At one pomt, be 1S quoted as saying to Flynn: "I am shall be acknowledged or recognized as an independent tired of the whole muddle ... It seems to me that there nation, tribe or power, with whom the United States is not a commonwealth in the United States so com­ may contract by treaty." pletely filled with envious, designing 2 x 4 politicians In other words, the tribes were subject to U.S. laws as is the Territory of Oklahoma." ' and their actions to congressional control. He ~meq~ed a strong leader and by his capable Then, through an act passed in 1889, federal courts admlntstrabon assured Congress that Oklahoma Terri­ were introduced in Indian Territory and the laws of tory was ready for statehood. Arkansas were extended over the territory in all except Indian courts, which dealt exclusively with Indians. V_EN Ferguson could not escape the party infight-. E mg. In 1905, anti-Flynn Republicans launched a HE FATAL blow fell in 1898 when Congress, over rumor-filled campaign to block his reappointment.
    [Show full text]
  • Summer in the WEST
    SUMMER 2011 Summer in the WEST Display until September 15 www.paragonfoundation.org $5.95 US The Journal of the PARAGON Foundatiion,, Inc.. photo by Audrey Hall OUR MISSION The PARAGON Foundation provides for education, research and the exchange of ideas in an effort to promote and support Constitutional principles, individual freedoms, private property rights and the continuation of rural customs and culture – all with the intent of celebrating and continuing our Founding Fathers vision for America. The PARAGON Foundation, Inc. • To Educate and Empower We invite you to join us. www.paragonfoundation.org IN THIS ISSUE 10 62 100 Of Note On Your Horses’ Feet Bending Tradition Current Events and Culture By Pete Healey The Craft of Matt Humphreys From Out West By A.J. Mangum 64 36 The West of Audrey Hall 104 A New Book from GB Oliver A Photographer’s Portfolio Warner Western The Music of the West Evolves 38 72 By Darrell Arnold The Artists Ride The Lazy JS Ranch A Rendezvous of Western Artists By A.J. Mangum 110 Cowboy Cavalry 42 76 Roosevelt’s Rough Riders Your Rights Cowboy Artist By Dan Gagliasso Common Sense By Thomas Paine Jay Contway Part 2 By Mark Bedor 118 Range Writing 46 80 Cowboy Poetry from The Living Words of the A Few Words from Daniel All Over the West Constitution Martinez By Nicole Krebs 120 PARAGON Memorials 84 48 R-CALF USA Celebrating The West Special Section 122 in OK City Recommended Reading The Western Heritage Awards 87 Old and New Books Worthy of Your Nightstand WSRRA 52 Special Section Mackey Hedges, Buckaroo 124 Out There By Darrell Arnold 91 FFA Cover photo by William Reynolds 58 Special Section Ranch Living Life on the Ranch with Thea Marx 96 America: Where the Power Resides Part Three: The County Commissioner By Marilyn Fisher Best Overall photo by Audrey Hall Publication 2009 Old Cowdogs Classic Saddle Silver & Spanish Ornamentation in the traditions of the Pacific Slope.
    [Show full text]
  • University of Oklahoma Libraries Western History Collections
    University of Oklahoma Libraries Western History Collections Delmar H. Baldwin Collection Baldwin, Delmar H. Papers, 1820–1950. .33 foot. Collector. One letter (1937) from former U.S. marshal Chris Madsen; a proclamation by Oklahoma Territory governor Cassius M. Barnes welcoming Theodore Roosevelt; a reprint (n.d.) of a publication entitled Opening of Kiowa, Comanche, Apache and Wichita Indian Lands in the Territory of Oklahoma; a program of the Roosevelt Rough Rider Reunion of 1900 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Territory; a typescript (n.d.) entitled “Oklahoma Criminals with a History, 1889–1933”; and a copy of a magazine (1899) entitled Buffalo Bill’s Wild West and Congress of Rough Riders of the World. Box: Minor Archives B-29 Folder: 1. Cross-reference listing for the Cherokee Testament Bible, published before 1900 and printed entirely in the Cherokee Syllabary. 2. "The Family Story Newspaper," New York, N.Y. Four issues: May 18, 1889; June 22, 1889; July 6, 1889; August 9, 1890. 3. "The Family Story Newspaper," New York, N.Y. Six issues: July 13, 1889; Feb. 26, 1887; March 9, 1889; Nov. 24, 1888; April 13, 1889; June 9, 1888. 4. a. Flyer: "Our shifting friendship and hatreds make an historical pattern which should be broken by future generations." b. Notice proclaiming that Territorial Governor C.M. Barnes will deliver an address of welcome to visiting Governor Theodore Roosevelt. c. Musical score: "Be With Us, Lord, in Times of Peace." d. Reprint: "Opening of Kiowa, Comanche, Apache, and Wichita Indian Lands in the Territory of Oklahoma," by the President of the United States of America.
    [Show full text]