The El Reno Democrat. (El Reno, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 15, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 21, 1904 Page: 5 of 8
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George McClintock, Jr., editor of
the Kansas-Atueriean at McPiierson.
Kansas, and an old time El Renoite
is in the city on business and visit-
ing friends.
Judge C. F. Irwin, J. F. Bradford,
H. C. Bradford, Robert E. Dunning.
D. C. Minton and Tom R. Reid are
over in Guthrie taking the Scottish
degree.
That Union Depot.
There has been a great amount of
talk, very recently, about the grand
union depot that was going to be
erected by the Rock Island within the
confines of the city of El Reno. We
all would like to see a fine depot erec-
ted here. El Reno deserves one, but
Body Found.
A. J. Thompson one of the most I
(From Tuesday's Daily).
Victoria if Jan. 18 —The body j prosperous merchants in Okarche was j Pete Weasel, alderman for th,
visitor in the city yesterday. j third ward in Piedmont was clrcula
! ting around yes co-day.
Fred Wright and N. O. Barnhill j
are hunting out near Geary. 1 W. H. Bonebrake, of Clinton was
in the city yesterday ami returned
of A. W. Prince, of Kansas City, Mo. a
who with Guy Daniels, was travellt K j
around the world, giving musical re
ciuls, and drowned in the dalle m
wreck, was reco".\' i in Esquimau
harbor Saturday. Another body was
there is a way of going about get-1 seen in ihe straight at nightfall, but
ting it. It will do no earthly good wafi not recovered.
to keep hammering into the ears of
the officials of the road that the depot
R. C. Head, a nephew of Council-
man Roberts, is here from Scott coun-
ty, Kentucky visiting his uncle.
i must and shall come
1 other tack, as the sailors say.
Tobe Huffman, ball player and rail-
Let us try an-1 road man was in the city yesterday.
What Tobe is as good a catcher as there
! is to hinder us from getting up a'" ■ the territory and understands
petition in a business-like manner, railroading to perfection. He has
present the same to the city council t*n appointed yard man for the Rock
Band Concert. land ask that body to endorse It aud Island at Enid.
The concert given by the El Reno u ,Q th# headquarterl of .he
band at the opera house last night u,an(, wlth a requcst «hat the Delegate to Republican Convent.on
was one of the finest ever given ! prayer „f ,he petitioners Tie granted. The republicans of El
the city. There was not a hitch any- ^ |n m(nd (hat olJ and j lir(?lng Hon. C
Mrs. Peters and her daughter Maud mime this U'-rring.
have gone to Weatherford.
E. E. Blake has returned from
short visit to Wichita.
! E. H. Linree, formerly of this city,
| but now of Hobart is visiting with
| friends in the city.
H. P. Croff, who has been visiting I Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Shaffer were
with relatives in Kansa returned I visiting friends in Chickasha yester-
home Saturday. day. They returned home last night.
O.
Reno are
Blake to be a
where in the program. We under- cftn
stand a nice sum was realized which ; ^ y, „ Nor oau you
be used for the benefit of the
will
band.
W. C. Crawford who has been work-
ing in W. F. McGrath's pure food
store for over a year has gone to Cali-
fornia. He hated to leave El Ren',
and his employer but ill health com-
pelled him to do it.
Row in the Big Town.
never catch [delegate to the republican national
in convention in Chicago. Mr. Blake
this age of progress, "force a"corpora j la a republican all right and would
tiou like the Rock Island to do what make a first class delegate. Send
it does not want to do by all means. He has been here
long enough to know what his party
Wonderful Nerve. wants, and it would lake four yoke
Is displayed by many a man endur I of oxen to pull him away from any
ing pains of accidental cuts, wounds, j opinion he gets firmly settled in his
bruises, burns, scalds, sore feet or head
Miss Martin, teacher in Ihe south , Hon. Frank H. Greer was in the
ward schools visited in Chickasha ! city yesterday and it was whispered
i about that he hadcome over from
Guthrie to sign a warrantee deed.
yesterday.
The many friends of Miss Winifred
White will be sorry to hear that she
is very sick with typhoid fever.
Bert Bailey of Enid, was a visitor
In the city yesterday.
Dr. Smith has returned home from
a visit In West Plains, Mo.
Wm. H. Harrison, owner of the
townsite of Hillsboro, Okla., and edi-
tor of the Laverty Ledger, Is a visi-
tor in the city.
Oklahoma City, Jan. 19.—The coun-
cil combine last night again took the
bits in its teeth, and did several
things which, to say in the least, must
make it more contemptible, if pos-
sible, than ever in the minds of the
honest people of Oklahoma City.
Its first over act against the pub-
lic decency of the city was in refus-
ing to accede to a demand made by
a large number of the best business
men in the city asking for a public
hearing of the charges against Wads-
worth. The next which followed hard
after, was an instruction to the city
attorney to secure possession of the
city engineer's office at once in be-
half of Mr. Wadsworth. The next
was the adoption of a motion to lay
the new charges against Wadsworth
on the table. Another action, evi-
dently taken for the purpose of coer-
cion, was the passage of an ordinance
providing for annual election of may
or, chief of police, city assessor and
city treasurer. Still another action,
also for the purpose of coercion, was
the introduction of an ordinance mak-
ing the Times-Journal the official or-
gan of the city; presumably for the
reason that The Oklahoman persists
in telling the truth about the com-
bine. The meeting last night was
the culmination of all the indecency
which the combine was organized to
promote.
Not only were the repeated charges
against the city engineer thrown
aside, but they were rubbed into the
people of Oklahoma City by a pre-
emptory order for his reinstatement,
in spite of the fact that a large por-
tion of the business men of the city
asked *hat an investigation be given.
No other reason can be assigned
for this brazen and remarkable slap
stiff joints. But there is no need for
Bucklen'a Arnica Salve will kill
the pain and cure the trouble. It s
the best salve on earth for piles, too,
5c, at Rhoades & Cook's druggists.
P. T. Barnum once said: "If you
have $19 to put In use, pay $10 for tl.e
article and $9 for advertising. I can
out talk any man but a printer. The
man who tan stick type and the next
morning tab: to a thousand men, while
1 am talki ig to one, is the mar. I
rm afraid of, f.nd i want to be his
friend."
Ohl Brother Gunn.
Mrs. Dora Pierce lives in one of the
little homes that dot the hills and
dales of the Wichita mining region
near Meers. Christmas eve she
caught a fine young hen and was pre-
paring it for the morrow's dinner.
The craw was opened and from there-
in was taken a small nugget of gold
fully as large as a number eight bird
shot—the pure stuff. Indications
point to the fact that gold is so plenti-
ful about that section that even a hen
with an eye to business can find yel-
low metal.—Lawton News Republic.
Dave Bothell, one of Canadian conn
ty's solid men with no fault ex'.ept
that lie votes the republican ticket,
came down from Okarche toda/
Married in London.
They Must Cultivate.
President Roosevelt's marriage reg j Muskogee, I. T., Jan. 18. Saturday
er is in London, at St. George's. Indian Agent Shoenfelt ruled that in
Hanover square, and so many Amer-
ican tourists have flocked to see It,
that, for convenience sake, It has
been placed by Itself in an accessible
alcove of the old church building.
President Roosevelt's marriage to
Miss Cerew took place so long ago
seventeen years ago, to be exact
that few persons remember that the
American president was married in
a foreign land. He is, it is said, the
only American president whose wed-
ding was not celebrated under the
stars and stripes.
"Bed Four Weeks with La Grippe.
cases where persons had taken five
year agricultural leases on Indian al
iotments and had failed the first year
to put any part of the land in culti-
vation Ihe lease is void and persons
so occupying allotments will be re
moved by the Indian police. Th 5 rul-
ing has caused consternation among
lease men as there are hundreds of
thousands of acres that will be sub-
ject to this ruling. Three fourths of
the leases made have not been in
cultivation the first year, and in many
instances the money has been paid
five years in advance. Their attor-
ney filed notice today that they would
ask an injunction to prevent the agent
I from removing the leaseholder.
Today the Indian inspector received
notice that the president had approv
ed the Cherokee council bill providing
Mrs. S. S. Duncan of Chicago who
has been visiting with Miss McClure
of this city Is visiting with Col. Jones
of the Cheyenne Indian Bchools.
INTERESTING PARAGRAPHS.
The Berlin directory, the 1904 ed-
ition of which is just out, has com-
pleted its 200th year.
Dr. M. A. Kelso, a leading physician
of Enid sends us his check for $7.00
on subscription with a note saying
use it for ammunition against the
arch conspirators of the Democrat.
Judge and Mrs. Frank E. Gillette,
returned to Anadarko yesterday after
a pleasant visit with their sons,
daughters and grand-children in this
city.
More poisonous snakes are found
in Arizona Ihati in any other pari of
Ute United State,.
Out of the 150,000 houses or fiats
Glasgow, 36,000 have one room
only, and 70,000 only two rooms.
Horses, giraffes and ostriches have
the largest eyes of land animals; cut-
tle fish of sea creatures.
Europe loses 86,592 lives a year by
accidents, and 87,000 die from similai
causes in the United States each year.
At a cost of $32,500,000 a largo cen-
tral depot with thirty-two tracks is to
be built at Leipsic.
The nice spring weather we have
been getting the past two weeks has
started the trees and shrubbery to bud
ding. Charles Wattson, assistant
postmaster, has roso bushes in his
yard that arc budding out nicely.
S. A. Ttmmerson, of Enid, was in
the city yesterday with a view of
locating here, ho says the more he
sees of El Reno the more he likes
It.
George Harms left this morning to
resume his duties in the machine shop
in Chickasha. George is a first class
mechanic and is not afraid of soil-
ing his hands.
There will bo something doing at
the next council meeting. Alderman
Streams, Monger and John Jackson
examined the ditch from the mills to
Rock Island avenue yesterday.
We have received the following let-
ter from Mr. Roy Kemp, of Angolo, !
Ind. "I was in bed four weeks with
la grippe and tried many remedies ^ removal of twenty cents per ton
and spent considerable for treatment rQyaUy Qn a„ hay shipped out of the
with physicians, but I recenec no cherokee nation. The government
leif until I tried Foley s Honey and ^ . ^ ^ ^ co]lect|ng (hja tax
Tar. Two small bottles o us me< ^ fjve years and numberless suits
cine cured me and I now use it ex- ^ ^ re8ulted< Finally the railroads
clusively in my family. refused to accept for shipment hay
knew the splendid merits of lo y whlch ,iie royalty had not been
would never be
laid.
in the face of the people than that Honey and Tar you w
the combine has come to the conch,, i without it. A dose or two will ^
sion that the days of the members | vent an attack of pneumonia
are numbered politically, and the tail , grippe. It may save your life,
may as well go with the hide. Nor by C. R. Miller.
certain than the [
is anything more
conclusion named.
GO AHEAD GENTLEMEN.
Another Injunction.
Muskogee, I. T„ Jan. 18.—Saturday
Mansfield, McMurry and Cornish, at-
torneys for the Choctaw and Chick-
Europe has lour and a half m'les
of railway lor every 10 000 people;
,l.e Unit;! -'i-tei has twtnt> '*'•"
tr lies.
The legislative conn SI at Pretoria
r.as voted in lave: of t.v inn idunion
/ .Asiatic labor la South Afrlei.
Sockets trivs been placed for
1P000 incan lo .ten* lights on the
i'r.i ee of El ic.itioi. at the world's
lair
Vienna is to have a lupus hospital
which will provide accomodation for
the treatment of a hundred patients.
AN IMPORTANT SALE.
Of Horses, Cattle Hog6, Sheep, Farm
Implements And Household Fur-
niture at Public Sale.
A novel restaurant at the world's
fair will be one with the walls of the
building made of glass tank in which
will swim fish.
The People of El Reno Will Support
You.
It is understood now that four mem-
bers of the city council will at the
— - " ■
Baron Hay-
Question of Time.
London, Jan. lS.-In the opinion of asaw nations, filed in the court of,
tj,l nritish government the end of Hie western distr.ct a petition for in- ,aRt ypar,s ro|)urt fronl thc 56,000
." wt.,,k does not make any change junction to restrain the Dawes com* j „08l0fflccg of tI)e German empire
far eastern crisis, which more mission from giving allotments in the j shQw a decreas ()t 200.000 in the num-
ber or letter card .sold.
One of the largest and best sales
of fine slock such as horses, ealtle,
hogs, and sheep together with a fine
lot of farm machinery, buggies and
wagons all new and a lot of house-
hold furniture, will be sold at the old
Kellogg farm 2 miles west and 2 miles
south of El Reno and 5 miles east of
old I I caston. on Wednesday, January
27th.
The sale will commence at 10
o'clock in the morning. Major J. P.
Gutelius, one of the very best auction-
eers in the territory will cry the sale
which is a sufficient guarantee that
It will bo done in proper shape.
The horses are standard bred and
are very fine drivers among the mares
are two extra fine draft animals tnat
are as good as can bo found any-
where.
CALUMET ITeMS.
W. J. Smith, of Shawnee, who has
been visiting his daughter, Mrs. G. W.
Jensen for the past week returned
home Monday.
Tobe Swiser came to town Tuesday
morning and had us all smoke on his
boy. He wouldn't have a girl round
hig place. When he went home his
wife told him the truth. "It was a
girl." Whon asked what he intended
to do with the girl, he said; "My
wife insists on keeping it, and a wo-
man will always have things her own
way."
Alex Hadlock has sold his drayf
business lo It. L. Folsom.
The prospect 8 are good for a Rural
Free Delivery route from hero south
as far as the Nicely "Star" route.
The agent will bo here to inspect the
route Friday.
Wren Moore and ' Billy" Sombart,
of El Reno spent Thursday and Fri-
day hunting quail and other small
game.
Dr. E. M. Gilham and J, C. Hurt at-
tended Masonic lodge at El Reno Mon-
day night. Mr. Hurt was initiated
into the mysteries of Masonry while
there. But what they lacked in do-
ing to him up there, their team tried
to do on the way home. When cross-
ing the track at Ft Reno, their horses
got frightened and ran into a ditch,
throwing all the occupants out, and
cutting a gash about 6 inches long
One of Ihe horses was badly bruised
up but will be able to travel in a
week or so. The boys Bay they were
all straight at the time of the acci-
dent, but of course we have a right
to draw our own conclusions just the
same. Now if Ihe accident had of
happened going to El Reno, that story
would have been all right. But com-
ing from El Reno, "That's too thin
boys, it wont stick."
The M W. A. Camp held their In-
stallation of officers Tuesday night.
Geary officers were In attendance and
performed the Installation Ceremony
The officers are Venerable Council,
Thos. <!. Jackson; Worthey Advisor,
Alex Hadlock; Banker W. 11 Johnson
Clerk, T. I'. Quailey; Escort. John
Bledsoe; Chief Forrester, Hugh A.
Todd; Managers, .1. C. Hurt, L. T.
Samuelson and 11. A Todd Jr. Aftei
Installation the ladies of Calumet
spread a fine supper and everyone
seemed to enjoy the occasion.
Dr. Gilham was hunting lodging
Sunday. He had his whiskers and
i moustache shaved off Saturday night,
and Ills wire told him she wouldn't
have any such looking animal around
her house. Doc. slips in the house
and taps the cubbard whenever his
wife goes visiting, just the same.
Jim Fiinn and bis children left for
their claim in Beaver county Tuesday,
Mrs. Fiinn will follow later.
Tom Jarvlll has moved on the
Bryan place north of town.
Alva Williams sold his dry goods
and shoes lo C. B. Carrol, of Elk
City, Monday.
the
ban ever keeps diplomatic circles in
London in a slate of anxiety.
The latest, and if it has ben true,
the most serious statement, namely,
two nations to certain Mississippi
Choctaws who failed to remove to
the territory within six months, the
time given by the commission. All
Mississippi Choctaws were given six
months to remove to the territory and
make their claim. At the end of that
time all had not come. The secretary
that are getting heavier every day.
We hope this is true. This has been ; from the forelg;n office ^ extende(, the tlme and
talked of for some time and if the j ashi, the P ^ ^ ^ ^ fl{ th(j Mi88l8eippi choctaws got in.
good work is accomplished at the | Downing s inquiries the Brit- The attorneys for the two nations
next meeting the people will be very jter ma g ^ convinced that have protested against these being
thankful. j '^n au_"" given allotments and served papers
his < in T H. Bixby Saturday. The case
in hand cites but ten citizens, but if
St Michael's chnrcn at Coventry i
said to have the largest nave of any
English church. It is 125 feet wide.
That of York Minister is 104V£
in width.
fe
TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS.
We are mailing to every delinquent
subscriber a statement of his account
with a request to come In, or send in
and settle up to date. We need what
is due us on our books and must col-
lect It. Tho small sums which many
of our subscribers owe us amounts to
hundreds of dollars' It amounts to
| nut a few dollars to thorn as indtvid-
i uals but represents the labor, time
the report was unfounded.
King Edward continues to us 1
personal influence to an alnnst un-
precedented extent to persuade th<"
c -.ar lo rr.a'nUu;: peace 'ju: the king s
ni.risters appear to have practica l
given up hope that a resort to arms
can be averted, though the most pes-
the attorneys win it will knock out
hundreds of citizens who would other
wise get allotments.
This is the most important suit
that has ever been brought against
Right You Are Bill.
Emperor William likes a cigar, but,
according to recent reports from Ber-
lin, he has now learned that no cigar
is comparable to good tobacco smok-
ed in a good pipe. In his smoking ^ ,,c,
room there are several pipes, biffl : ™u ">=-"person's do not look for any the commission and involves a prop-
some he lias never used, and there is ■ i n *. i w„hln three erty right in the Choctaw and Chick-
only one which he constantly uses, j c agaw nationg estimated at five mil-
A beauty it is. having been i Spectator now regards war as lions
by an artist from a deslgn furnlshe l | ,n wMch ,t merely f0,l0ws
by the kaiser himself. The ^ Ug own signiflcant line of argu-
Congratulations.
The bowl,
which is larger than usual, is that a Russian-Japanese -var Mr. john H. Cullom, editor of the
meerschaum; the stem which is ra - ^ tQ Great Britian's advan.ag\ ' Garland, Texas, News, has written a
er long and delicate, is of lurk.^
wood; a hnely carved cluster of
leaves ornaments the bowl and "
large silver W. on which a silver bird
is perched, decorates the stem. In
this pipe the Emperor smokes Hav-
ana tobacco which is specially pre-
pared for him.
A Cute Trick.
Diamond thieves are said to lie thc
cleverest in the world. In mining dia
monds it is necessary
every precaution, but even then
by thieft is considerable. Many
havo been swal-
em-
A negro in
the
long as Great Britian is on'.v an|]etter of congratulations to the manu
looker and while the struggle does facturers of Chamberlain's Cough
a involve any other power. The Remedy as follows: "Sixteen years
Spectator has previously pointed out ago when our first child was a baby
in guarded language that such a wai he was subject to croupy spells and
was likely to leave both Russia and we would be very uneasy about him.
japan crippled, neither gaining a We began using Chamberlain's Cough
' great advantage over the other, which Remedy in 1887, and finding it such
Suggest* the deduction current in of- a reliable remedy for colds and croup,
ficial circles here that in the event we have never been without it in the
Great Britian would be in a better house since that time. We have five
foster her sphere of in- children and have given it to all of
them with good results. One good
In order to develope a cattle in
dustry in Nigeria, a number of milch
cows have been purchased in the
Barbadoes and shiped direct to the
west coast of Aftica.
Hundr ' is of petitions hive uccumu-
aied at the Vatican from painters
^tnd sculptors a3kir g the Pipe for sit-
tings. b I these applications havol
!>een r 'I'b'd.
Fifty-nine per cent of deaths from
consumption are people under forty-
five years of age. 29 per cent from for-
j five to sixty, and 12 pe • cent of
people over sixty
The Metropolitan Art Museum of
New York has just purchased an old
chariot for $50,000. It was unearthed
near Rome so-i time ago, and is
2,600 years old and splendidly pre-
served.
own way
Now you
all
us than a
But remember
settlement in
The cattle are in good shape, among ftnd expense of getting out
them arc a fine Hereford hull and cow j I)aper for |en or twelve
There Is not an old animal in ,h"' j al,,i as above stated
bunch and the cows will all be fresh
about March 1st.
There arc two brood sows with pigs
that are as fine as can be found any-
where. Those wanting a male hog
can find just what they want, also six
head of extra fine sheep.
The farm impliments consisting of
1 disc plow, 1 diamond gang plow, 1
wheat drill, 1 McCormick binder, 1
McCormlck mower, 1 sulky lister and
four sets of work harness. Are all in
the finest condition and as good as
new. There is not a poor article in
the lot-
There will also be sold 1 new rub-
ber tired carriage, 1 buggy and a wide
tired wagon. These vehicles are good
enough for any man, and will be sold
regardless of what they cost. —
There will also be a lot of good | it. None of them had a
household furniture sold, consisting sell.
of bead steads, dinning room and
kitchen chairs, a cubbard and dresser
bed room suit, range cook stove.
news-
paper for ten or iwuive years to us.
and as above stated we must have
this money. If our delinquents will
not send It to us, we will be compelled
In a short time io place these accounts
in the hands of a collecting agency
who will proceed in their
to collect what is due us.
will find it more satMfaetc
concerned to settle with
collector and we would much rather
that you would do it.
that we must havo
some form with every delinquent sub-
scriber.
T. F. HENSLEY
Wheat is Up.
Wheat took a big jump today and
the El Reno speculators were not in
Hon. George W. Bellamy returned
last night from a short visit to Chick-
heating stove and a gasoline stove, asha.
besides a hundred or more articles
Likes to Stay Home.
John Connaughton, principal keep- j this sal
NOTICE.
There will be a special meeting of
the Stock-holders and Directors of
Fair Association held
29, 1904, at county court
You need not bring your i house,
too numerous to mention.
The owner of ail this property,
Marian Wolf, is going to quit farm-
ing and what will be his loss will be j the Central
vour liain if you purchase anything at Friday, Jan.
your gam ^ Canadian County,
Stock-holders meeting at
in Sing Sing prison, has not visit- : lunch with you as arrangements ha\e . oklahoma. _tin„ at
in sing Dius | to feed a big crowd. |l;30 and Directors meeting at
exercise : l,osition t0 ,
iiuence in the far east
loss
stones, for instance
lowed by the natives and others
ployed in handling them. A negi
actuallly stole
valuable dia-
the Kimberly mines
and swallowed ten
monds. The stones were valued even
in the rough state at $«,000.
feature of this remedy is that it is
parsons has gone, to Drum not disagreeable! to take and our
r"*,i>h - be night babies really like it. Another is that
mond, I. T., where he will
operator for the Rock Island at that
point.
Hon. E. D. Humphrey
business in Kansas Cit>.
Is doing
it is not dangerous, and there is no
risk from giving an overdose. I
congratulate yiu upon the success of
your remedv.' For sale by all drug-
gis's.
ed New York city for twenty-nine
been made
years, and there Is little likelihoorl
that he will ever do so. The reason
of this is that there are in that city
a great number of men who would kill
him. In his capacity as prisonkeeper | given, purchaser givinp
Connaughton has approved security bearing 1" per
Mr. Wolf offers good terms to those i o'clock l
who buy at the sale. On all sums of tendance
$10,00 and under cash, over that
amount a credit of six months will be
note with
for forty years Mr
earned the enmity of many desperate
criminals, most of whom hate him
with an intensity which would induce
them to murder should the chance of
fer.
cent interest, 3 per cent discount for
cash. No property will be removed
from the ground until settled for.
Attend this sale and buy what you
want at your own figures.
Let there be a good a
CI1AS. L. ENGI.E, Sec y
The
plant
It Comes in Handy.
Democrat's private electric
is a mighty handy thing '°
havo these dark mornings. It lights
up the office and job room of the print
shop and casts its refulgent beams
over the Fair Book store.
\ ' h
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Hensley, T. F. The El Reno Democrat. (El Reno, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 15, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 21, 1904, newspaper, January 21, 1904; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc111431/m1/5/: accessed May 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.