The Noble Weekly Journal. (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, June 30, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
ADDS TO SPLENDOB
! '
t
t
MEN OF BUSINESS RECOGNIZE
ADVANTAGES OF ACETYLENE.
Famous Summer Hotel, the Grand
Union of Saratoga, Has Installed
This Best of All Artificial Lights-
Means Increased Comfort and
Health.
REBATE INQUIRY
FACTS IN THE RECENT RAIL-
ROAD INVESTIGATION GIVEN
TO THE PUBLIC
DIPPING COMMENCES
Saratoga, June 27.—The very name,
"Saratoga," brings to every mind
health-giving springs, unsurpassed
hotels and beautiful drives. It
has been tor many years the
Mecca for all who admire nature,
enjoy good living, and are searching
for health, or are simply taking a va-
cation.
The Grand Union, the largest sum-
mer hotel in the United States, set
OFFICIALS OF ROAOS HELD RESPONSIBLE
Special Agents Judson and Harmon
Made Report in February—Oppo-
sition to Contempt Proceedings
Sprang Up in the Department
WASHINGTON President Roose-
velt has taken occasion to express
himself in most positive terms com-
plimentary of the integrity and ability
of Paul Morton, former vice president
among green trees with its long wings of U)e Atpllison> Topeka & Santa Fe
enclosing a court with fountains and ^ Railway eompanv, anil now conclu 1-
flowers, grass and trees, music and , ,nR h-s dut,es Ra secretary of the
light, is throughout the season throng-
ed with guests. With the progressive
spirit always shown by its manage-
ment, the Grand Union has again add-
ed to its attractiveness by introduc-
ing acetylene gas to make still more
brilliant the evening hours. The ge-
nial proprietors believe in furnishing
their guests with the be^t of every-
thing, and now, after investigating
and finding that Artificial Sunlight
can be had, they have Installed a com-
plete acetylene gas plant to produce
It, and have connected upwards of six
thousand acetylene burners in and
about the house and grounds to this
little gas plant.
Like many discoveries of recent
years, which are coming into popular
favor, acetylene, one of the most re-
cent, is very simply produced. It is
adapted for use wherever artificial
light Is needed and the necessary ap-
paratus can be understood and oper-
ated by anyone.
The generator in which Acetylen®
Is produced by the automatic contact of
carbide and water might be termed a
gas plant, as it performs all of the func-
tions of a city gas plant. The acet-
ylene generator can be purchased for
a few dollars and in any size, from
one adapted to furnish acetylene to
ten or a dozen burners for a cottage,
up to the large but still simple ma-
chine such as is now furnishing
Acetylene for six thousand burners
in the Grand Union.
Outside of large cities the use of
Acetylene Is quite common. The
owner af the country home now de-
mands running water, gas and other
conveniences which a few years ago
were considered as luxuries, and
acetylene gas has met his require-
ments, apd gives him a better an«
cheaper light than is ordinarily fur
nlshed in cities.
It is well known that rooms lighted
*ith Acetylene are more comfortable
because cooler, and more healthful b
cause the air is not vitiated.
navy that he may assume the chair-
manship of the board of directors of
the Equitable Life Assurance society mango, however, the recent order of
Cattle in Woodward County Are Be* .
ing Dopped in Oil
GUTHRIE: R. H. Hahn, terri-
torial cattle Inspector, announces that
the dipping of cattle has been com-
menced in Woodward county, under
an order issued some time ago by the
Oklahoma live stock sanitary board.
The order requires the dipping of
cattle according to government regu-
lations. This order applies to cattle
which have been infected or ex-
posed this year to mange. Itch or
scabies.
The northwestern portion o!
Woodward county has been infected
with mange for several years. Last
spring a campaign to eradicate the
disease from Oklahoma was vigor-
ously commenced. Although many
farmers protested, yet Inspector
Hahn. with the assistance of the
sheriff, dipped every head of cattl:*
in the infected district. As a result
of this campaign, very few herd
showed any signs of infection this
spring- In order to wipe out the
Flustering the Teacher.
"Now in order to subtract," ex-
plained the teacher to the class in
mathematics, "things have to be al-
ways of the same denomination. For
instance, we couldn't take three apples
from four pears, nor six horses from
nine dogs." A hand went up in the
back part of the roonf. "Teacher,"
shouted a small boy, "can't you take
four quarts of milk from three cows?"
Ships Cat3 to Farmers.
Marshal Van Worley has gone Into
a new business, viz., the shipping ol
cats out of Titusville. He has ship-
ped about twenty to the farm of Mr.
Eli Walker at Quay. There were all
sorts of cats, large and small, and all
shades of color; some with ears and
tails and some without.—Titusville
(F!a.) East Coast Advocate.
of New York. These expressions are
contained in twd letters, one ad-
dressed to the attorney general and
the other to Mr. Morton. The let-
ters have been made public by the
administration, n* ether with a num-
ber of others which, taken together,
show the precise of difference the de-
partment of justice and Messrs. Har-
mon and Judson, who recently re-
signed as special counsel for the gov-
ernment in the rebate case involving
the Santa Fe road and the Colorado
Fuel and Iron ompany. The special
counsel wished to bring contempt pro-
ceedings against the officers of the
road, which would have included Mr.
Morton. Their position was that
the testimony before the interstate
commerce commission established a
violation of the court order of March
25, 1902, restraining the company
from executing an agreement to
transport interstate traffic at rates
lower than the published tariff of the
road. The testimony, they contend,
constituted a prima facia case
against the officers of the road, and
the only way to ascertain their guilt
or innocence was through contempt
proceedings.
The attorney general, Mr. Moody,
opposed bringing the contempt pro-
ceedings on the ground that while
the evidence before the commission
might show a violation of the in-
junction by the officers of the road,
t contained nothing charging any of-
ficial of the company with such vio-
lation. President Roosevelt took the
same view. Both tfxe president and
the attorney general agreed that con-
tempt proceedings should be institu-
ted impersonally against the corpor-
ation. in both the Colorado Fuel and
the International Harvester cases.
The latter case, thw president says,
stands exactly on the same footing
and involves practically all of the
western roads.
The correspondence began with
letter from Mr. Harmon and Mr. Ju
son to the attorney general, dated
February 23 last, in which was given
a review of the testimony in the Colo-
redo Fuel case before the interstate
commerce commission, with the con
elusion that a violation of the In
junction had been shown.
Volcanic Cloud.
A volcanic eruption at St. Vincent
once threw a cloud of dust against the
wind to Barbados, a distance of 100
miles. The deposit fell for twelve
hours over the entire island, attaining
a thickness of nearly half an inch. Its
estimated weight was therefore nearly
2,000,000 tons.
Municipal Care for Children.
The first person who notifies the
medical officer of health of Hudders-
field, England, of the birth of a child,
within forty-eight hours of such birth,
Is rewarded with a^shilling. This is
done so that the officer may send the
mother printed advice as to the best
treatment for young children.
American Railway Crossings.
There are nearly 5,000 steam and
street railway crossings at grade in
the United States, of which nearly one-
half are protected.
English Statesman's Opinion.
Some are inclined to look upon the
philanthropic employer as a distinct
advantage to the community; but It
occurs to me that the workers' wives
could spend the money to greater ad-
vantage.—Will^Creoks^LJ^
Better Coloring.
Can he obtained in many plant*
flowers if they are placed in the sur
niest parts of the house. Hard woocl
ed plants grow aad flower much bei
ter la the sun-
Defended His Grandmother
GUTHRIE: Grover Brown, 1G
years old. was sentenced at Tecum
seh to two years in the penitentiary
for shooting at a neighbor with in
tent to kill. The boy admitted firing
the shot, but said the person he was
shooting at had accused his grand-
mother of stealing carpet rags. On
account of his youth Judge Burforil
paroled the boy and ordered him to
report to him at the first of each
term of court. He made the boy
promise to attend Sunday school, not
to smoke cigarettes and not to loaf
around saloons.
the board requiring that cattle ba
dipped, was issued.
W. T. Judkins, cattle inspector, is
in charge of the work in Woodward
county, and he will have the assis-
tance of the sheriff. Several herds
of Beaver county cattle which were
driven Into Woodward and exposed
to the mange. One owner of cattle
was arrested and fined $100 and costs
for driving his live stock out of the
infected district without first having
them properly inspected.
NOT ON EXHIBITION
Quanah Parker Will Avoi I Being
Stared at July 4
LAWTON: Quanah Parker, chief
of the Comanche tribe of Indians
with his three wives and four chil-
dren, passed through Lawto'i on his
way to the "big pasture," which be-
longs to the Indians Chief Parker rep
resents. The "big pasture" is located
in the southwestern part of Comanche
county, and the Indian chief is going
there for an extended hunt. The
Parkers rode In an old United States
government ambulance, recently do-
nated to the chief by the interior de-
partment. Before leaving lawton
the ambulance was loaded to Its ca-
pacity with provisions. Chief Parker
decided to make the trip at this time
In order that he might avoid the
Fourth of July crowds, which will go
to the Wichita mountains, near his
home.
"Many hundreds of people will
make the journey to my home just to
stare at me and my family," he said,
"and I am becoming very tired of
that sort of thing. I am going out
to fish and hunt for several days or
weeks, and I am not certain when 1
will return home."
WATER POWER DEVELOPMENT
A RULING ON OIL LEASES
Guardians fer Minors Must Advertise
for Sealed Bids
NOWATA: Independent oil oper-
ators received a heavy blow at the
hands of Judge Gill of the federal
court when he ruled that guardians
of minor Indians mu?t advertise for
bids for oil leases, and that persons
desiring to buy leases must hand in
sealed bids.
The order, it is said, will block the
leasing of 50,000 acres of land, and
makes void seventy-five leases, cov-
ering 7,000 acres. Under provisions
of the decision such time will be con-
sumed in procuring leases that only
persons of large means can compete.
Not less than one month will be re-
quired in the operation of red tape.
Independent producers say the order
will operate in favor of the Standard
Oil rnmianv, which has scarcely en-
tered the field. The time require!
in prospecting and securing leases
on good oil or gas l'and, they say, will
not justify the rislu
Capitalists Organize to Harness
Proposed Fall a! Weleetk
WELEETKA: A meeting of capi-
talists of the two territories met her
last week to view the water pove
situation. A company was organized
and preliminary work begun.
The North Canadian river runs
within two and a half miles of this
place, on the west, makes a detour of
thirty miles and returns to within a
half mile of the town on the east.
The company proposes to cut a canal
through the neck of land, and as be-
tween the river on the west and on
the east there is a fall of fifty-eight
feet, the water will be dropped on
turbine wheels, anil it is believed
that 20,000-horse power can be de-
veloped.
The company will be incorporated
shortly, and it will be one of the
strongest concerns within the two
territories. Surveying will be com
hienced next week, and the work will
be pushed to raipd completion.
CITY WARRANTS RAISED
A $20,000 hotel la being built a'
Watonga.
Lawton Is Having Trouble on Ac
count of Wholesale Forgeries
LAWTON: The taxpayers of Law-
ton have not only been the victims
of graft, but a systematic form of
raising city warrants was discovered
by Mr. Knappe and Mr. Ketch, who
were appointed some time ago to
check up the books of the former city
clerk, and also the books of the city
treasurer.
In cases where warrants were is-
sued for six dollars, the men who are
conducting the investigation found
that "teen" had been added to the
word six. and a figure 1 placed in
front of the figure 6. A number of
these warrants were cashfed by the
city, and in each case the holder re-
ceived ten dollars too much. In one
instance it was found that a warrant
had been raised for fifty dollars over
the amount for which it had been is-
sued.
Some of these warrants have passed
. through many different hands, and It
* ' would be difficult to ascertain who
raised them.
KG
^OUNCES r0ff
The Home
ol the
Wave Circle
UES
is the home where good cooking is
loved, where the family enjoy the
finest of biscoits, doughnuts, cakes,
and pies and other good things every
day. The baking is always delicious
and wholesome because
K C Baking Powder
—the baking powder of the wave
circle, is used.
Get K. C to-day! 25 ounces for
25c. If it isn't all that we claim,
your grocer refunds your money.
Send for "Book of Presents."
JAQUES MFG. CO.
Chicago.
$
tine I
Truths that Strike Home
Your grocer in honest and—if ho cares to tlo so—can tell
you that ho knows very little about tho bulk coffee he
sells you. How can he know, where it originally came from,
how it was blended—or With what
—or when roasted? If you buy your
coffee loose by tho pound, how can
you expect purity and uniform quality 1
LION COFFEE, the leader OF
ALL PACKAGE COFFEES, is ol
necessity unllorm la quality,
strength and llavor. For OVER A
QUARTER OF A CENTURY, LION COFFF.E
has been the standard collee In
millions ol homes.
LION COFFEE l carefully parked
at our factories, nnd until opened In
your home, has no chance ol bclirg adul-
terated, or ol coming In contact with dust,
dirt, germs, or unclean hands.
In each package of LION COFFEE you got ono full
DOUnd of Pure Coffee. Insist upon getting the genuine.
(Lion head on every package.)
(Save the Lion-heads for valuable premiums.)
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
STflHiiBftm goss A?.; MEB
OUR FAMILY" SHOES'
Will fit pvery foot In yoor family, and tho price will ple.no yon aa well. Thoy are made of
best leotherforlonKwenr;haye atyle and anap. Ask your dealer to show you the "Family"
line. If ha does not handle It write to us direct and wo will «ee thai you aro aupplled.
Roberts.JoHNSoiN^fUiNDixLo ui §
COTTON GINNING MACHINERY
We Make the Best.
We Make the Largest Line in the World.
We have more well pleased and happy customers than all other
makers combined, because they are making, money. You know the
MUNGER, PRATT, EAGLE, WINSHIP and SMITH goods.
We make them. Write us for prices and catalogue.
CONTINENTAL GIN COMPANY, DALLAS, TEXAS
[PILES
NO MONEY TILL CURED. 28 YEARS ESTABLISHED
Wo send FKtK aod postpaid a J52-p ie treatise on Piles, Fllt«l« aod Dheasci of the
Kecium; also 132-pue illua. treatise on Dlttasasol Women. Of the I •winds cured by
00 mild method, none paid > teal till corod we !ur«l?b Ihtlrixmca on aepllcitlao
Drs. Thornton & Minor, i'"uSooakS6t"ka Tj a s°c itV
Tough on Russia
A sorrow's crown of sorrow for
Russia—the markets of the world rise
Joyously on the news of her crushing
defeat.—New York Mail.
It Murders Laziness.
"Take a few doses and watch your
energy increase—also your appetite.
Work will be a pleasure and pleasure
not an empty name. Life has new
charms to those who use Simmon's
fHrasaparilla for it supplies health
from which all happiness must spring.
Use it and feel yourself grow."
It takes a lot of 4uck to pusli a man
up hill.
Made a Satisfactory Trade.
An Osage man traded his next-door
neighbor a good horse for an old
piano Monday. The hor3e was worth
twice the value of the piano, but the
man figured he is ahead because he
has the Instrument now where it can
not be played.—Kansas City Times.
"T)r. T>avid Kennedy's Favorite Remedy
cured roe of llrlicht'* I Humane and Gravel. Able phyim'tana
tailed." Mr.. E l'. Msner. Burghlll, o. tl.oo a bottle.
To the housewife who has not yet
become acquainted with the new things
of everyday use in the market and
who is reasonably satisfied with the
old. we would suggast that a^lrlal of
Defiance Cold Water Starch be made
at once. Not alone fcecause It is guar-
anteed by the manufacturers to be su-
perior to any other brand, but because
each 10c package contains 16 ozs.,
■while all the other kinds contain hut
12 ozs. It is safe to say that tha lady
who once uses Defiance Starch will us®
no other. Quality and quantity must
win.
Wiggs—How does Scribbler rank j Fried as spring chicken, or baked
as a poet? V.'agg—Among Hie rank ; as old chicken, is tie lion any better
est.
I than the roostert
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Noble Weekly Journal. (Noble, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, June 30, 1905, newspaper, June 30, 1905; Noble, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc117890/m1/3/: accessed May 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.