The Moore Messenger (Moore, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 15, 1913 Page: 7 of 8
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EXTRAORDINARY
Special May Sale of
Millinery
PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION, SAN FRANCISCO. 1915
Values from $3.00 to $.rj.00
at
$800 to $1000 Trimmed Hats $5.00
Eighty-seven of them, of high-
est <|uality of material, newest
shapes l colors, smartly trim*
<T C
Girls' $2.00 to $.vo Hats $1.60
Newest shapes anil straws, while
they last (ti CO
last, choice..
Children's
Sty les,
choice —
$1 00 tc
$1.98
$1.50 newest
69c
$5 to Trimmed Hats $J
150 of them, newest shapes and
colors and trimmings. While
they last
i h.Mcc i"r
S3.50
Terminal Millinery
TERMINAL ARCADE
No. 7 North Harvey - Oklahoma City
Itton
oW-ti'ON rt'u,r,^Te^*«^TtiTco;;r:yTb« 8 .3..™ *.* * ««•«; . >
S W hit,.' This court, approximately Tr.0xl.90 t will dlvld, th, main ^mbou'lil oTt^On""'
north to south Upon the east of the court Hsur« elephants cam*l . Arab warner* symbolical of the Orient
will surmount a huge arch, the Arch of the Rising Sun. larger than the Arc de Trlotnphe, upon the west of the
court the storv of the setting sun will he depleted, surmounting the arch upon the west prairie schooners and In-
ures of pioneers who pushed across the western plains will he shown
Fretting Not Harmful to Fishes
Fishes do not need to maintain .1
uniform or nearly even bodily tern-
OKL A CLE A NS-O.
j\ delightful shampoo—will kee
perature, and they ran be frozen solid >our hair In a healthful condition
and thawed out months afterwards make It grow glossy and line. 27,
without injury to their health, if the ' H M NECESSITIES CO.,
PMH-es. la not too sudden Such ^ ^ ^ Bu(|d,
changes happen to millions of them,
. .1 .ui r Oklahoma City, Okla.
every year In the rivers of the colder i "
— 1^—
The Road to Good Bread:
Choice Wheat
Modern Machinery
Experienced Millers
Sanitary Methods
Heliotrope Flour
We look after all of the above. From Heliotrope Flour fo
Good Bread is a short trip, and is easy for you.
The Heliotrope Way Is the Sure IVay.
OKLAHOMA CITY MILL & ELEVATOR CO.
The Quality Mill The Sanitary Mill
UNDERWOOD BILL PASSES HOUSE
Five Democrats Desert Majority, and
Two Republicans and Five Pro-
gressives Vote For the Bill.—
Mooser Answers "Present."
Washington—The Underwood tariff
bill proclaimed by the democratic
party as the answer to its piattorm
pledge to revise the tariff downward,
was passed by the house. The vote
■was 281 to 139, live democrats voting
against the bill and two republicans
voting for It. Four progressives sup-
ported the bill and fourteen voted
against, while one Independent pro-
gressive joined with the majority.
When Speaker Clark announced the
vote In loud tones that revealed his
satisfaction in the arrival of the day-
he long had sought, exuberant demo-
crats, hoisted a stuffed democratic
donkey over the heads of their col-
leagues in the rear of the chamber,
a faint ripple of applause followed
and the gavel tell on the first chapter
in the history of President Wilson s
extra session of congress.
With the bill, after three weeks con-
sideration, on its way to the senate,
there was a rush of representatives
for their homes. In the house an ad-
journment will be taken three days at
a time begining next week until June
1. In the meantime, the senate finance
committee will study the bill while the
house ways and means committee will
organise committees preparatory to
the transaction of business next
month.
Republicans and progressives led re-
spectively by Representatives Mann
and Murdock, protested to the last
against the measure, the lowest tariff
ever written, and proclaiming as the
democratic avalanche bowled them
over the virtues of different tariff com-
mission plans.
Republicans who voted for the bill
were Cary and Stafford of Wisconsin.
Democrats who opposed it were
Broussard, Dupree, Lazare and Mor-
gan of Louisiana, on account" of the
schedule reducing sugar 25 per cent,
and sending it to the free list in three
years, and C. B. Smith of New York.
Progressives who voted for the bill
were Kelley and Rupley ot Pennsyl-
vania, Nolan of California and Bryan
of Washington. Kent of California,
formerly a republican, but now an in-
dependent progressive, also voted for
the bill. Progressive Leader Mur-
dock and thirteen of his progressive
followers voted with the minority.
Representative Copi€>y of Illinois, a
progressive, did not vote, answering
'■present" to his name.
The bill's passage through the sen-
ate will be fought at every step by
a republican organization apparently
entirely in accord on this subject and
entirely willing to spend unlimited
time and energy ill an effort to defeat
it. Leaders of the democrats on the
senate finance committee, which will
handle the bill, expressed the belief
that it would go through in practically
the same form aS it passed the house
and that their small majority will
stand firm to the last. Subcommit-
tees of the finance committee, which
have been investigating the sched-
ules of the bill for the past few weeks,
plan to make a few changes in several
schedules, but wool and sugar and
other schedules which brought out the
hard fighting in the house, are not to
be touched, according to the present
plan.
Dennis Sweeney, John Murtha,
James E. Hussey and James F.
Thompson, former police inspectors
of New York City, convicted of con-
spiring to obstruct justice to check
graft revelations were sentenced to
serve one year in the penitentiary and
pay a fine of $500 each. This is the
maximum sentence.
William Taylor, an aged man, was
shot in the head and will die and
several other persons were slightly in-
jured during a riot in an attempt
to break up a mass meeting of social-
ists at Huntington, W. Va.
Just at the time Oklahoma farmers
were concluding that silos were good
investments, along comes competing
silo salesmen who tell the farmers
that the iron ones will rust, the
wooden ones rot and the concrete ones
crack.
Louis Marhhclm, proprietor of one
of the largest lace and embroidery
concerns in New York City was sent
to the Tombs in default of $25,000
bail on indictments charging attempt-
ed grand larceny and filing false
claims for a loss he estimated at $131.-
000 in connection with a fire In his
establishment on April 12.
The board of aldermen passed unan-
imously an ordinance taking from the
streets of New York its 10,000 push
carts. The measure, which was drawn
by a bom mission after a lengthy in-
vestigation. has the approval of Mayor
Gaynor, provided for giving peddlers
special stand privileges at the ap-
proaches of East River bridge and in
certain city squares. Its passage was
bitterly opposed by the peddlers.
The five Japanese associations on
the Pacific coast forwarded to the sec-
retary of state and the' secretary of
labor protests against the proposed
appointment as United States immi-
gration officer at Seattle of Henry
White of Bellingham, because as a
democratic member of the Btate sen-
ate he was author of the anti-alien
land bill that was killed at the re-
queat of Secretary of State Knox.
The Japanese embassy was sup
township government except in forty-
four specified counties, alHo was passed
to final roll call, after much debate in
which many expressed the belief that
the exemptions of the bill either ren-
dered the whoffe of no effect or at
least that such exemptions were un-
lawful. The legislature could not pans
The Japanese emuassy ui>- —
Plied by the state department with a an act to apply to some counties and
copy of the alien land-holding bill not to others, argued those who op-
passed by the California legislature | posed the bill.
and the ambassador will employ the
time between cow and Secretary
llryan's return to Washington In pre-
paring a protest against the bill.
Contempt of court judgments
The bill would apply to thirty-three J
counties of the state, the forty-four i
counties exempted being as follows: j
Wagoner, Kay, McIntosh, Osage, Okla-1
homa. Lincoln, Nowata, Garfield, Cad- j
- , „ , u„ xn, do Tillman, McCurtain, Custer, Pot
against Samuel Gompers. John Mlt-1 McClain. Washita. Choc !
cliell and Frank Morrison, for their. ^ Beckham, Kingfisher,
violation of a court Injunction in the • ;
noted Buck s Stove and Range com- ^ c,n)arron> Major, Creek.|
pany case, were affirmed by the dis-. Cana(,ian Washington, Noble, Wood- j
t1 let court of appeals, but " .J"' , Ward, Comanche, Kills. LeFlore, Tulsa,
sentences imposed were held to have' , _
been too severe; so the court reduced I Pawnee, Cotton, Cherokee, Dewey,
Ciompers' sentence from one year to Beaver, Harper and Grady.
thirty days and decreed that Mitchell! The duties of the township officials
and Morrison should merely be fined j thirty-three counties where
$o00 each. j township government would be abol-
Township Bill Advanced Ml* "' transferred to the county
The Lemon-Griggs bill, abolishing* commissioners and treasurer.
SOME ONE
Sung by "CLIFTON CRAWFORD" in his Latest Success
AT THE PARK THEATRE, NEW YORK
Moderalo. Sentplice.
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Allrgra Comodo
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1. Son tone's eyes are deep and bin#
1!. Someone's lips arc sweet and red
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Someone's hair i§ gold-en too, Pome one I shall try to woo,
Daiu-ty she from feet to head, Someone I should like to wed,
3. Some one tried to
run a-way
(i >p)-a.
Cepyrlfht by The American Melody Co., New York.
Armstrong-Byrd Music Co.
- « A. tv cTorrT _ . OKLAHOMA CITY
Summer School
Special work during summer months. Individual instruction to all.
Start now to take your business training and be ready for the fall season ol
business.
School Halls
5th floor Baltimore Building, corner Grand and Harvey. Ventilated lrom all
sides, above the noise and heat of the streets and has elevator service.
GOOD POSITIONS guaranteed to graduates. Write for catalog.
DRAUGHON'S BUSINESS COLLEGE
T. M. FLANARY, Mgr. Oklahoma City, Okla.
a rod
But she did not
say mc nay,
But she did not
me naj
all one day,
When I told her
Some one,
But she did not
say me nay
(i tempo
Someone love's me now 1 know, Home one is
my own, and oh,
fcM=i
: s
jg i
tempo.
if * * *
<0
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g#
rail
Some one.
Some one kiss'd me, y
i
Some one kiss'd me, i
a tempo
Some One.—3.
211 WEST MAIN STREET,
Pianos Sold on Easy Terms
Terms as Low as $5 per Month
Popular Sheet
Music 10c
per Copy
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Smith, Mamie. The Moore Messenger (Moore, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 15, 1913, newspaper, May 15, 1913; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109301/m1/7/: accessed June 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.